Aditya Dhar’s spy-action spectacle for Jio Studios and B62 Studios crosses the 30-day mark in cinemas with India NBOC at ₹1,153 crore and a resilient ₹13.5 crore fifth weekend, reaffirming its status as 2026’s defining Hindi blockbuster.
Dhurandhar: The Revenge has extended its dream run into a fifth weekend, pushing its worldwide gross to about ₹1,783 crore and tightening its grip as the year’s dominant Hindi theatrical phenomenon. The Aditya Dhar-directed spy-action entertainer, backed by Jio Studios and B62 Studios, has now spent more than 30 days in cinemas and continues to post steady numbers despite new releases crowding the marketplace.
On its fifth weekend, the film added an estimated ₹13.5 crore nett in India. Day 30 (Friday) came in at roughly ₹3 crore, Day 31 (Saturday) climbed to about ₹5 crore, and Day 32 (Sunday) inched higher to around ₹5.5 crore, keeping the three-day frame in double digits and signalling healthy word-of-mouth well into its second month.
Cumulatively, Dhurandhar: The Revenge has collected about ₹1,153 crore NBOC in India, driven by a massive extended first week (eight days) of roughly ₹690 crore, followed by a sturdy second week of around ₹271 crore, a third week contributing about ₹120 crore, and a fourth week adding roughly ₹58 crore. The domestic GBOC is now pegged at approximately ₹1,360 crore, placing the film in a rare bracket of Hindi titles that have managed both a record-breaking start and durable post-week-one legs.
Overseas, the thriller has grossed an estimated ₹423 crore, taking its worldwide tally to roughly ₹1,783 crore. The India–overseas split underlines how the film has functioned as a true event title – anchored by overwhelming home-market demand but amplified by sustained traction in key international territories where high-concept Indian spectacles continue to grow their audience base.
Even beyond the numbers, Dhurandhar: The Revenge remains an ongoing obsession for viewers and the industry. In the weeks since release, it has fuelled charged debates over nationalism and franchise storytelling, sparked memes and fan edits, and become a touchstone in conversations about what a post-pandemic Hindi tentpole can look like. Trade and critical commentary has repeatedly framed the film as a hinge moment for Hindi cinema’s box-office comeback, arguing that its scale, tone and political edge have reset expectations for big-screen Hindi event films.
With its fifth-weekend hold confirming that audience interest is far from exhausted, Dhurandhar: The Revenge now looks set for an extended theatrical tail. For producers, exhibitors and rivals alike, its ₹1,783 crore global haul and continuing cultural aftershocks ensure that the film will remain the benchmark – and the obsession – against which the rest of the 2026 slate is measured.
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