Lal Singh Chaddha won the box office, Akshay’s advance collection doubled from Raksha Bandhan, know the earnings so far
Lal Singh Chaddha’s Advance Earning – 8 Crore
Lal Singh Chaddha has left behind Akshay Kumar’s Rakshabandhan in advance booking. If reports are to be believed, Lal Singh Chaddha has earned around 8 crores in advance. Whereas, so far only two days have been opened for advance booking.
raksha bandhan earnings
On the other hand, despite the tremendous promotion of Akshay Kumar, Raksha Bandhan has been able to earn only around 3 crores in advance. It remains to be seen whether Akshay Kumar’s film can stand firmly in front of Aamir Khan’s film or not.
Ek Villain Returns Benefited
Either film Raksha Bandhan and Laal Singh Chaddha could have released on Friday of 5th August which remained empty. But it has benefited from Mohit Suri’s film Ek Villain Returns. Starring John Abraham, Arjun Kapoor, Disha Patani and Tara Sutaria, this film has slowly earned 37 crores despite poor reviews.
Aamir Khan said on North Vs South box office
Putting some examples in front of Aamir Khan, Karan Johar told that the kind of South films that the Hindi audience is liking at this time are almost the same in their structure. Larger Than Life movies, be it Pushpa or KGF 2. Interestingly, till a few years back Bollywood was making similar films but then we ourselves shunned these films. And most of the credit goes to Aamir Khan because in 2001 there were two films – Dil Chahta Hai and Lagaan. Both these films were completely different from the Hindi films of that time. This was followed by Rang De Basanti in 2006 and Taare Zameen Par a few years later.
Aamir told the rules of box office
Karan Johar said, Aamir you are the person who turned the audience towards a different kind of cinema. Responding to this, Aamir clarified that it is not so at all, all these were absolutely land related films. Those movies which the audience wanted to see but did not reach them. Dangal was also a special kind of film but completely grounded. The mistake was when we started bonding and making films for a limited audience and leaving the rest of the masses. I think we missed it there.