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Worldwide gross Language Year Ref. 1 Pushpa 2: The Rule ₹280 crore: Telugu 2024 [192] 2 RRR ₹223 crore Telugu 2022 [193] 3 Baahubali 2: The Conclusion [bb] ₹217 crore Telugu Tamil 2017 [194] 4 KGF: Chapter 2 ₹165.37 crore Kannada 2022 [195] 5 Kalki 2898 AD ₹161.50–180 crore Telugu 2024 [be] 6 Salaar: Part 1 – Ceasefire ₹145 ...
Worldwide gross Language Year Ref. 1 Pushpa 2: The Rule ₹280 crore: Telugu 2024 [137] 2 RRR ₹223 crore Telugu 2022 [138] 3 Baahubali 2: The Conclusion [c] ₹217 crore Telugu 2017 [139] 4 KGF: Chapter 2 ₹165.37 crore Kannada 2022 [140] 5 Kalki 2898 AD ₹161.50–180 crore Telugu 2024 [ak] 6 Salaar: Part 1 – Ceasefire ₹145 crore ...
Salaar: Part 1 – Ceasefire ₹475.1 crore: Telugu 2023 [28] 16 PK ₹473.33 crore: Hindi 2014 [29] 17 Bajrangi Bhaijaan ₹444.92 crore: Hindi 2015 [30] 18 Avengers: Endgame ₹442.30 crore: English 2019 [31] 19 Sanju ₹439.14 crore: Hindi 2018 [32] 20 Tiger Zinda Hai ₹434.82 crore: Hindi 2017 [33] [34] 21 Sultan ₹421.25 crore: Hindi ...
Worldwide gross Year Ref. 1 Pushpa 2: The Rule ₹280 crore: 2024 [56] 2 RRR ₹223 crore 2022 [57] 3 Baahubali 2: The Conclusion ₹217 crore 2017 [58] 4 Kalki 2898 AD ₹161.50–180 crore 2024 [o] 5 Salaar: Part 1 – Ceasefire ₹145 crore 2023 [61] 6 Devara: Part 1 ₹170 crore 2024 [62] 7 Saaho [i] ₹116–130 crore 2019 [p] 8 Sye Raa ...
Leaning full-tilt into its duology structure, Tollywood action drama “Salaar: Part 1 – Ceasefire” has a winding, often confounding narrative aimed at building up a sequel, but its maximalist ...
It was officially announced in December 2020 under the title Salaar, however, in July 2023, the official title was announced as Salaar: Part 1 – Ceasefire. Principal photography commenced in January 2021, and occurred sporadically in several legs over nearly three years, before wrapping in late 2023. Filming locations included Telangana ...
The first Indian film to have a worldwide release was from 1952 (Aan, directed by Mehboob Khan). In the 1950s, Indian films saw success in a handful of regions. At the time, the most significant market for Indian films was the Soviet Union, gaining considerable success and occasionally leading to Indian-Soviet co-productions. [1]
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