Every once in a while, a film reminds the industry that hype doesn’t always win — belief does. Dhurandhar’s box office journey has now turned into a case study on how word-of-mouth can overpower scale, screens, and even James Cameron.
A slow start that changed everything
When Dhurandhar opened in theatres on December 5, expectations were high — but the opening numbers were merely decent, not explosive. Many trade watchers assumed the film would follow a standard arc: solid first week, tapering interest, and a visible slowdown by week three.
Instead, the opposite happened.
Powered by strong audience feedback, the Aditya Dhar-directed spy thriller not only held its ground but earned more in Week 2 than Week 1, a rare feat for a big Hindi release. By mid-December, the film had already crossed ₹460 crore India net, setting the stage for an unexpected face-off.
Enter Avatar — and the screen crunch
The real test arrived with the India release of James Cameron’s Avatar: Fire and Ash, a franchise known for dominating Indian box office charts. The Hollywood spectacle arrived on 3,800 screens, taking over all IMAX screens and several premium formats across major cities.
As a result, Dhurandhar’s screen count dropped by an estimated 40%, shrinking from its original 5,500-screen footprint. Its IMAX run — which had contributed around ₹14 crore — came to an abrupt end.
On paper, this should have been the moment Dhurandhar slowed down.
It didn’t.
How the numbers tilted the battle
Avatar: Fire and Ash opened to ₹19 crore net in India — a surprisingly muted start by Avatar standards. On the same day, Dhurandhar pulled ahead with ₹22.5 crore, despite fewer screens and no premium formats.
That Friday was the only close contest.
By Saturday and Sunday, Dhurandhar surged, adding nearly ₹73 crore net over the weekend. Avatar, meanwhile, managed around ₹48 crore in the same period, with minimal growth from day to day.
The gap widened quickly — and visibly.
Theatres made their choice
By Monday, an interesting shift began to unfold. Several smaller centres and single screens quietly reallocated shows back to Dhurandhar, backing a three-week-old Hindi film over a brand-new Hollywood release.
The reason was simple: people were still turning up.
Since Avatar: Fire and Ash’s release, the Hollywood film has collected around ₹70 crore net in India. In that same window, Dhurandhar crossed ₹100 crore, extending its lead without the benefit of IMAX, dubbed versions, or franchise familiarity.
Word-of-mouth beats spectacle
What makes Dhurandhar’s run especially striking is how it’s winning. There’s no visual-format advantage, no premium-screen dominance, and no pan-language cushion. The film is thriving almost entirely on audience endorsement — repeat viewing, strong recommendations, and sustained footfalls.
It’s a reminder that in the Indian market, scale helps — but trust lasts longer.
The road to ₹600 crore
With momentum firmly on its side, Dhurandhar is now tracking toward the ₹600 crore India net milestone, a club only two Hindi films have entered so far. If current trends hold, the Ranveer Singh-starrer is expected to reach the mark before the end of the month.
Against the odds, against reduced screens, and against one of the biggest global franchises — Dhurandhar hasn’t just survived the clash. It’s defined it.
Final Words
Dhurandhar vs Avatar: Fire and Ash wasn’t just a box office clash — it was a referendum on what truly drives audiences to theatres. And the verdict is clear: when word-of-mouth clicks, even Pandora has to step aside.
