logo
India Box Office: ‘Saiyyaara' Ranks Among Global Top Scorers

India Box Office: ‘Saiyyaara' Ranks Among Global Top Scorers

Forbes5 days ago
Indian actors Ahaan Panday and Aneet Padda on a poster of their debut film 'Saiyyaara'.
The new Hindi film - Saiyyaara - had an unexpected opening day at the box office. The film features newcomers Ahaan Panday and Aneet Padda and is directed by Mohit Suri. After breaking records in advance bookings, the Bollywood film managed to score a whopping $2.5 million in India alone and the opening global gross stood at $3.3 million. The Indian film scored an impressive $13.8 million worldwide in its opening weekend and became the ninth highest-grossing film worldwide.
Saiyyaara Crosses $3 million Opening Day Collection
Director Mohit Suri, known for his musical rom-coms, struck gold with his latest Bollywood release - Saiyyaara. After scoring big in advance bookings and opening day collections, the film managed to rank among top-scoring films of the week worldwide for the week ending July 20.
Irshad Kamil, Mithoon and Raj Shekhar have penned the lyrics for the film's songs which were chartbusters much before Saiyyaara hit theatres.
Soon after the advance bookings opened for Saiyyaara, the audience showed immense love for the film despite featuring newcomers. Before the release, the movie made $1 million in advance bookings sales in India alone. The film had a smashing opening at the box office, scoring nearly $3 million in India and $3.7 million worldwide.
Saiyyaara maintained the pace on Saturday - its second day at the box office. It crossed $6 million at the Indian ticket windows in two days and grossed $7.5 globally. According to producers Yash Raj Films, the film made $13.8 million worldwide and earned more than $10 million at the Indian box office by the end of the first weekend.
With that score, Saiyaara became the ninth highest-grossing film worldwide on Comscore's list this week. The list recorded $11.9 million global gross for the film. Saiyaara scored the second highest opening weekend for any film in India in 2025. Vicky Kaushal-starrer historical war drama Chhaava remains on the top. Saiyyaara is being hailed as the highest opener for any Hindi film headlined by debutants. It also marks the biggest opening ever for a Mohit Suri film. Suri has previously delivered fan favorites Ek Villain and Aashiqui 2.
Even before the release, Saiyyaara was being hailed by Mohit Suri fans as the unofficial third film in the hit romantic franchise Aashiqui. The film is not Aashiqui 3, not officially. Yet, much like the previous two films, the new one is about artists finding each other and the sacrifices they make for their selfless love.
Loosely based on the Korean film A Moment To Remember, Saiyyaara is about a troubled musician (Panday) and his connection with a shy writer (Padda). As he does his best to run away from his traumatic situation instead of dealing with it, the musician meets a simple young writer who mesmerizes him and leads him on the path of light and love. The writer has her own demons of the past to deal with, but she is more willing to do it and takes the lead. The obstacles that come in this love story and how the lovers tackle them forms the crux of Saiyaara.
Saiyyaara is evidently illogical and impractical at many times, but the film is about emotions and passion. If tragic love stories are your pick, this will be a good one. Interestingly, the film does not end on a tragic note. The climax is full of selfless love, hope and a ray of light.
Panday makes his acting debut with Saiyyaara while Padda has earlier featured in Prime Video's Big Girls Don't Cry and the film marks her Bollywood debut. The cast does a commendable job, with Panday deserving a special mention. While most of the passion and emotions in the film come from the plot itself, he lends one of the emotional scenes in the climax such honesty and craft that it transforms into a memorable one.
Saiyyaara, however, is not a flawless film. It skips almost every detail of the surrounding society - it avoids anything but personal emotions in the narrative. The focus of the love story is so limited that it fails to provide an empathetic graph to the people involved in the love story except for the lead couple. Even the parents, except for the one who provides a trauma-turned-redemption angle to the love saga, are not explored enough.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Box Office Grosses Won't Return to Pre-COVID Levels Even by 2029, New Report Forecasts
Box Office Grosses Won't Return to Pre-COVID Levels Even by 2029, New Report Forecasts

Yahoo

time4 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Box Office Grosses Won't Return to Pre-COVID Levels Even by 2029, New Report Forecasts

U.S. and global box office and total cinema revenue will not reach pre-COVID-19 pandemic levels by 2029, according to accounting firm PwC's annual closely watched media and entertainment outlook report released late on July 23. In the U.S., pre-pandemic total cinema revenue is not forecast to be reached by 2029 despite a compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of 3.9 percent. PwC had recorded nearly $11.7 billion in U.S. total cinema revenue in the pre-pandemic year 2019 after $11.8 billion in 2018. The firm projects the figure to rise from $8.9 billion in 2024 and $9.6 billion in 2025 to $10.1 billion in 2026, $10.3 billion in 2027, $10.6 billion in 2028 and $10.8 billion in 2029. More from The Hollywood Reporter ITV Unveils New Cost Cuts, First-Half Ad Revenue Drop After Year-Ago Soccer Boost, Studios Gain Benedict Cumberbatch to Receive Zurich's Golden Eye Award How a New Generation of British Documentarians Is Embracing Politically Charged Storytelling Asked by The Hollywood Reporter about how pre-COVID box office levels are not expected to be reached by 2029, Bart Spiegel, PwC global entertainment and media leader, says: 'Unfortunately, this full recovery is unlikely within the forecast period. However, we project that by the end of 2029, the industry will be on the brink of a full rebound. In other words, 2030 may be the year global box office revenues return to pre-pandemic levels.' Pre-COVID, U.S. box office in 2018 amounted to $10.8 billion before a 2019 drop to $10.7 billion. PwC forecasts the 2024 figure of $8.1 billion to grow to $8.7 billion this year. For the 2025-2029 period, it predicts a CAGR of 3.86 percent to push box office revenue to nearly $9.8 billion by the end of that period. In terms of admissions, PwC lists 777 million for 2023, a drop to 734 million for 2024 and an estimated rebound to 778 million for 2025. It projects a 2.3 percent CAGR for the U.S. to 823 million in 2029, compared with 1.3 billion in 2019. By then, the average admission price will climb to $11.86, or 'over $2 more than the $9.16 charged in 2020 and 2021,' the report explains. Total U.S. cinema revenue in 2024 fell to $8.9 billion from $9.1 billion in 2023, 'but the drop was anticipated and not as steep as had originally been feared,' highlighted the PwC report. (Yet it hit the bottom line of studios as well.) 'The Writers Guild of America (WGA) and Screen Actors Guild–American Federation of Television and Radio Artists (SAG-AFTRA) strikes of late 2023 had slowed down production — and there were fewer 'tentpole' titles than would normally have been anticipated.' For the global box office, PwC forecasts the 2024 figure of $29.7 billion to grow to $33.5 billion this year. It then predicts continued growth to $37.7 billion by the end of the Outlook report period in 2029, compared with $39.4 billion in 2019. 'It's important to remember that industry revenues are ultimately driven by price times volume. In this case, while ticket prices are rising, admissions (volume) are not expected to return to pre-pandemic levels,' Spiegel says. 'Instead, the growth in global box office revenue is being fueled by higher ticket prices. These ticket price increases are driven by several factors, including enhanced infrastructure and facilities, technological advancements, and rising content costs.' The accounting firm notes that transition has hit Hollywood many times in the past, highlighting: 'In recent years, the U.S. film sector has been disrupted. The streamers overturned traditional business models, the pandemic hit the box office, and the 2023 strikes stymied the post-COVID-19 recovery. But U.S. industry history reveals that the sector has experienced challenges many times before, with everything from the conversion to sound to the anti-trust legislation of the 1940s, the arrival of TV as a mass medium in the 1940s and 1950s, and the VHS revolution of the 1970s. In each case, the sector recovered. It is doing so again now.' Here is a closer look at some of the U.S. cinema sector trends highlighted in PwC's Global Entertainment & Media Outlook. Franchise Films and Tentpoles Growth in U.S. box office revenue this year 'is again being driven, as in pre-COVID-19 years, by franchise movies building on existing IP — with Disney re-established as the pre-eminent player,' the report notes. The studio had three of the top five hits in the U.S. market in 2024: Inside Out 2, Deadpool & Wolverine, and Moana 2.… Each of the five major studios — Disney, Universal, Warner Bros., Sony and Paramount — had sizable hits. Universal's Wicked, Despicable Me 4 and Twisters; Warner Bros.' Beetlejuice Beetlejuice, Dune: Part Two and Godzilla x Kong: The New Empire; Sony's Bad Boys: Ride or Die and It Ends With Us; and Paramount's Gladiator II and Sonic the Hedgehog 3 were all strong successes.' PwC also points out that 'blockbuster titles like Captain America: Brave New World, the live-action Snow White and live-action How to Train Your Dragon, motorsport drama F1, the latest reboot of Superman, Wicked: For Good, Zootopia 2, Mission: Impossible – the Final Reckoning and Avatar: Fire and Ash should ensure that 2025 is a reasonably robust year. In 2025, it is expected that 110 films will be produced and released in more than 2,000 sites in North America, up from 95 in 2024.' Meanwhile, 'an observation that has continued to be made over the last decade is that so-called mid-budget movies, which include award-contending dramas, are struggling at the box office,' PwC mentions. 'These are the pictures that spectators seemingly prefer to watch at home.' Concludes PwC: 'The U.S. remains a very polarised market with a handful of 'tentpole' movies accounting for a vast amount of the profits.' Windows Experiments Experiments with day and date releasing, making big blockbusters available on streaming platforms with little or no period of exclusivity in cinemas, 'have now been largely discarded,' the PwC report highlights. 'This reveals a shift in the studios' mindset and an acknowledgement that releasing in cinemas first is still regarded as the most reliable way to drive ancillary sales. Streamers involved in film production, like Amazon MGM and Apple, are also committing to 45-day theatrical windows for their bigger titles.' Netflix remains focused on its streaming platform, though. 'Netflix's Oscar contender Emilia Pérez was given only a very brief theatrical release (primarily to ensure awards qualification) before being launched to stream on the Netflix platform,' notes the Outlook. 'Emilia Pérez's box office revenue was, relatively, low at around $15 million globally. The film secured 13 Oscar nominations despite not being seen widely on the big screen.' Cinema Appeal 'U.S. exhibitors have been trumpeting research that suggests the public is re-embracing the theatrical experience,' PwC points out. 'The National Association of Theatre Owners cited a report into cinema-going habits compiled by UCLA, which revealed that seeing a movie during opening weekend ranks as the number one preferred activity among 10–24-year-olds. This counters prevailing anxiety about the loss of a younger audience too preoccupied with TikTok and Instagram to go to cinemas. Market research also suggests that for certain genres — horror and comedy in particular — younger cinema-goers like to watch with their peers and to enjoy the shared experience.' Theater Amenities Cinema operators' upgrades to luxury seats is 'one factor driving admissions for more-affluent customers,' according to PwC. Loyalty and subscription programs offering discounts have also been on the rise. For 2024, the firm reports 119 million loyalty club members, up from 106 million in 2023. 'PLF is continuing to make gains,' the Outlook report also emphasizes. 'In North America, 950 theatres now have large-format screens — a 37 percent increase from five years ago and a clear sign that cinema-goers are looking for a spectacular experience that can't be replicated at home. A record number of at least 14 Hollywood and international releases shot with Imax cameras will hit cinemas in 2025 — and will be shown on the Imax global platform at the company's 1,700 locations.' Sony's Alamo Deal Could Spur Theater Buys Sony Pictures' 2024 acquisition of exhibitor Alamo Drafthouse made Sony the first studio giant to move back into owning cinema assets. 'Anti-trust legislation that had been in place for over 70 years, from 1948 to 2020, meant that Hollywood studios were previously prevented from owning their own movie theatres,' highlights PwC in its report. 'There is the possibility that other U.S. studios will follow suit. This means they can again become fully vertically integrated — controlling production, distribution and exhibition, just as they did during their heyday from the 1920s to the 1940s.' Best of The Hollywood Reporter How the Warner Brothers Got Their Film Business Started Meet the World Builders: Hollywood's Top Physical Production Executives of 2023 Men in Blazers, Hollywood's Favorite Soccer Podcast, Aims for a Global Empire Solve the daily Crossword

Rotterdam Unveils 2025 Hubert Bals Fund Projects
Rotterdam Unveils 2025 Hubert Bals Fund Projects

Yahoo

time4 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Rotterdam Unveils 2025 Hubert Bals Fund Projects

The International Film Festival Rotterdam (IFFR) has unveiled the projects that will receive this year's grants from its Hubert Bals Fund (HBF), which supports films from less-developed regions. The fund picked 15 feature projects from more than 900 submissions, selecting work from filmmakers from across Africa, Asia, the Middle East and the Americas. This year's selection includes the first HBF-backed project from Tanzania, the satire Last Cow from director Amil Shivij, whose feature debut Tug of War screened in Toronto in 2021 and was Tanzania's official Oscar submission. It was picked for this year's Locarno film festival and will screen in the Open Doors sidebar. More from The Hollywood Reporter Imax Quarterly Revenue and Profit Rise Amid Hollywood's Theatrical Comeback Ukrainian, Iranian Docs, Kenyan Sci-Fi Set for Venice Days Lineup Golshifteh Farahani to Receive Locarno Excellence Award Davide Campari Other African projects this year include Mwadia, a magic-realist drama on Mozambique's colonial past and present trauma; the feature debut of documentary filmmaker Inadelso Cossa (The Nights Still Smell of Gunpowder); Tears, the debut feature from Rwandan director Moise Ganza; and Coumba, the new film from Senegalese director Mamadou Dia, whose HBF-backed debut, Nafi's Father, won the Golden Leopard at the 2019 Locarno film festival and was Senegal's official entry for the Oscars. IFFR alumni talent can be found throughout this year's selection, with new features from Syrian director Farida Baqi (The Rapture), Indonesia's Timoteus Anggawan Kusno (Orphaned Atlas), Kazakhstan filmmaker Renata Dzhalo (Nobody to See Us), Malaysian director Amanda Nell Eu (Lotus Feet) and Brazil's Stephanie Ricci (Boca da noite) among the 2025 HBF recipients. The selected directors will receive a €10,000 ($11,760) grant each to help develop their projects into finished features. In addition to its regular fund, the HBF launched two new development schemes this year. Together with two-time Oscar winner Cate Blanchett, the HBF in January announced the Displacement Film Fund, offering grants of €100,000 ($104,000) each to five filmmakers, displaced by war or conflict, to make original shorts. A jury, made up of Blanchett, Wicked star Cynthia Erivo, documentarians Jonas Poher Rasmussen (Flee) and Waad Al-Kateab (For Sama), director Agnieszka Holland (Green Border), Rotterdam festival director Vanja Kaludjercic, activist and refugee Aisha Khurram and Amin Nawabi [alias], the LGBTQ+ asylum seeker who was Rasmussen's inspiration for his Oscar-nominated documentary Flee, announced the first fund grantees in Cannes this year. Also in Cannes, the HBF announced a cooperation with the three leading Brazilian film promotion bodies — Spcine, RioFilme, Projeto Paradiso — launching HBF+Brazil: Co-development Support, a three-year initiative to provide early development funding for up to nine fiction films, with €10,000 ($11,760) grants each. The submission deadline for HBF+Brazil projects, on is Sept. 15. Full list of 2025 Herbert Bals Fund development support projects Amateur, Carlos Díaz Lechuga, Cuba, SpainThe Appalling Human Voice of the Animals, Neritan Zinxhiria, Greece, AlbaniaBoca da noite, Stephanie Ricci, BrazilCoumba, Mamadou Dia, SenegalGirl With a Camera, Xiaoxuan Jiang, Hong Kong, ChinaThe Immigrants, Suman Mukhopadhyay, IndiaLast Cow, Amil Shivji, Tanzania, CanadaLotus Feet, Amanda Nell Eu, MalaysiaMoto, Chris Chong Chan Fui, MalaysiaMwadia, Inadelso Cossa, MozambiqueNobody to See Us, Renata Dzhalo, Kazakhstan, France, MoldovaOrphaned Atlas, Timoteus Anggawan Kusno, IndonesiaThe Rapture, Farida Baqi, Syria, Lebanon, Germany, NetherlandsTears, Moise Ganza, RwandaWhere Shadows Wait, Arya Rothe, India, Italy Best of The Hollywood Reporter The 40 Greatest Needle Drops in Film History The 40 Best Films About the Immigrant Experience Wes Anderson's Movies Ranked From Worst to Best Solve the daily Crossword

‘The Fantastic Four: First Steps' rockets to $118 million
‘The Fantastic Four: First Steps' rockets to $118 million

CNN

time6 hours ago

  • CNN

‘The Fantastic Four: First Steps' rockets to $118 million

Disney's 'The Fantastic Four: First Steps' stormed the domestic box office, topping superhero competitor 'Superman' to finish No. 1 with $118 million. The reboot was a major comeback for the series, falling within range of analysts' expectations but short of a hopeful $130 million. 'Fantastic Four' is also the best-performing weekend for a Marvel film this year, easily surpassing 'Captain America: Brave New World' in February ($88.5 million) and 'Thunderbolts' in May ($74.3 million). 'This new phase for Marvel is truly important for the brand,' said Paul Dergarabedian, senior analyst at Comscore, adding that it 'doubles down on the 'Thunderbolts' success and is showing that audiences love going to superhero movies in the movie theater.' Shawn Robbins, director of analytics at Fandango and founder and owner of Box Office Theory, called 'Fantastic Four' a 'zero-homework-required' release, because it stands separate from the Marvel Cinematic Universe's established storylines. 'That's exactly where their franchise needs to be right now, as they not only try to keep those die-hard fans but bring back some of the more casual watchers,' said Robbins. While some industry experts have said moviegoers may be experiencing 'superhero fatigue,' Daniel Loria, editorial director at BoxOffice Pro, said Marvel may be slowed by 'franchise fatigue.' Marvel Studios has released 37 movies since 'Iron Man' in 2008, with four 'Avengers' movies between 2012 and 2019 having combined to gross about $10 billion when adjusted for inflation. Perhaps adding to the Marvel fatigue was Disney releasing Marvel Cinematic Universe television series on its streaming service, which complicated the franchise, Dergarabedian said. It hasn't helped matters that since the pandemic, Marvel movies have failed to get off to a hot start, with 2024's 'Deadpool & Wolverine' ($211 million) and 2021's 'Spider-Man: No Way Home' ($260 million) being exceptions. 'So much of (the franchise) is readily available at home,' Loria said. 'I don't think 'Fantastic Four' plays into any of that. It's a fresh, new experience, and I think audiences are responding to that.' 'The Fantastic Four: First Steps' should help lift the franchise after the box office disappointment of 20th Century Fox's 2015 'Fantastic Four,' which grossed just $76.3 million domestically during its entire run, adjusted for inflation. Finishing No. 2 at the domestic weekend box office was Warner Bros. Pictures' 'Superman,' which grossed nearly $25 million. 'Superman,' part of the revamped DC movie universe, has so far grossed $289.5 million since opening on July 11. Dergarabedian said that the success of this month's two superhero films shows that 'if that genre or category of film were to disappear, it'd be devastating for the industry.' Warner Bros. Discovery is the parent company of CNN. Universal Pictures' 'Jurassic World Rebirth' came in third at the domestic box office, having grossed $13 million in its fourth week in theaters. It's grossed $301.51 million domestically so far. Robbins noted that there haven't been major examples of a DC and Marvel movie playing in theaters at the same time. He added that casual comic book fans who may normally pick one movie to see could make an exception to see both films in theaters. Loria cited a diverse slate of movies for continued moviegoing momentum. Aside from 'Superman' and 'The Fantastic Four: First Steps,' Paramount Pictures' comedy 'The Naked Gun,' which opens Friday, will open to offer 'a fresh, new genre.' This month's movie slate has lifted the box office 12.3% year-to-date compared to the same time last year, according to Comscore data. And the box office could still reach $4 billion this summer, Dergarabedian said, which would mark the second post-pandemic summer box office to reach that level. ''The Fantastic Four: First Steps' is going to fuel a very strong month of August. So what a great home stretch for the industry,' he said.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store