Dhurandhar Franchise Crosses Rs. 3,000 Crore, Becomes India’s Highest-Grossing Film Series

Mumbai (Maharashtra) [India], April 15: Usually, box office records in Indian cinema fall in slow motion. One film edges past another, the numbers shuffle, and that’s that. But what’s happened these last 26 days? That broke the script completely. No gentle climb, no steady rise—just a sudden leap that left everyone else behind.

With Dhurandhar 2: The Revenge, Aditya Dhar didn’t just roll out another sequel. He built something much bigger—a franchise that shattered the old limits. You don’t see numbers like this: the Dhurandhar series blasted past ₹3,000 crore worldwide. No Indian franchise had ever done that.

Look at what it left in the dust. S. S. Rajamouli’s Baahubali series topped out at ₹2,438 crore. Allu Arjun’s Pushpa films scored ₹2,092 crore. These weren’t just popular—they set the standard. But now? They got overtaken.

The stats say it all. The first Dhurandhar pulled in ₹1,307.35 crore. The sequel already crossed ₹1,712 crore, bringing the total to ₹3,019.35 crore. That’s not just momentum; that’s straight-up acceleration.

And the real gamble? Time.

A movie that runs for 3 hours and 55 minutes is asking a lot. People barely want to give two hours these days, what with fast cuts, short attention spans, and phones always buzzing. A 235-minute film should feel like a risk.

But it worked.

Audiences didn’t back away—they leaned in. The movie takes its time, lets scenes breathe, and somehow that extra length turns into a feature, not a bug.

The story picks up where the 2025 film left off. Jaskirat Singh Rangi—Hamza Ali Manzari—played by Ranveer Singh, is undercover again, operating across borders. His performance stands out not because he’s flashy, but because the pressure shows. He doesn’t try to be the hero every second. You see the weight on him.

When Dhurandhar 2 released on March 19, 2026, it went head-to-head with Ustaad Bhagat Singh starring Pawan Kalyan. Normally, that sort of clash splits ticket sales, but not this time. Both films did fine, but Dhurandhar 2 just sprinted off on its own track.

And the cast? They absolutely held it together.

For a film this long, you need people with presence. Sanjay Dutt and Arjun Rampal give off this steady menace without saying much. R. Madhavan is precise, razor-sharp. Sara Arjun and Rakesh Bedi bring in the quiet, everyday moments, making sure the film never gets lost inside its own scale.

The real surprise: the money didn’t come from China or the Gulf, which is where Indian blockbusters usually break through. This time, it was India itself and the Western diaspora doing the heavy lifting. That shift changes things—it points to a new center of gravity for Indian films.

For years, Indian filmmakers treated sequels like afterthoughts. You slapped on a familiar name but told a totally new story. The link was mostly marketing, not continuity.

Dhurandhar flipped the script. It planned for the long haul, building continuity across films and rewarding audiences for sticking with it. Trade trackers like Sacnilk are paying attention for a reason: ₹3,000 crore isn’t just a statistic. It means Indian movies can pull off big, multi-part sagas the way Hollywood franchises do.

The box office numbers hammer that home. In just 26 days, Dhurandhar 2 pulled in ₹1,311.68 crore gross in India, netting ₹1,095.67 crore. These aren’t just blockbusters—they’re cultural events.

Aditya Dhar did more than just release a massive film. He reset the bar for what a “big film” even means. Stretch one story across two huge chapters, give people room to immerse themselves, and keep them coming back. That approach isn’t common for Indian cinema on this scale.

Now, the definition of a blockbuster is something else entirely. The ceiling just got raised.

For everyone who made it through all 235 minutes, the film wasn’t about record-breaking. It felt patient, grounded. Like something important setting roots. The weight of what you’d just watched—well, that only hits you later.

PNN Entertainment