Kanguva box office Day 4: Suriya-Bobby Deol film earns ₹54 cr in India
Kanguva box office collection day 4: The film, which has been witnessing a dip for the last two days, did well on Sunday.
On its fourth day at the box office, “Kanguva” continues to shine in India, with the fantasy action epic featuring Suriya and Bobby Deol garnering impressive numbers, surpassing the ₹50 crore milestone over the extended weekend, as reported by Sacnilk. Despite receiving a variety of reviews, the film remains a strong performer in the Indian market.
Kanguva’s extended opening weekend
On Sunday, Kanguva’s earnings dropped slightly to ₹10.50 crore, following its strong performance of ₹9.85 crore on Saturday. This marked a small increase from the ₹9.50 crore collected on Friday. Nevertheless, Friday’s revenue saw a significant decline compared to the impressive debut on Thursday, when the movie raked in a whopping ₹24 crore across Tamil, Telugu, Hindi, Kannada, and Malayalam languages, in that exact sequence.
The film Kanguva has amassed a total of ₹53.85 crore from the domestic box office over the extended opening weekend, with an additional ₹10.50 crore contributing to this figure. Surpassing the ₹50 crore mark across all five languages, the movie’s box office success is undeniable. Yet, a noticeable decline in earnings indicates that the film is now feeling the impact of its predominantly negative reviews.
About Kanguva
The film, supported by UV Creations and Studio Green, marks the Tamil cinema debut of Bobby Deol and Disha Patani. Produced by K E Gnanavel Raja, Kanguva also stars Jagapathi Babu and Yogi Babu in significant roles. Described as an epic tale that transcends generations, the movie portrays Bobby as the main antagonist, showcasing his exceptional performance following his role in Sandeep Reddy Vanga’s successful family crime drama Animal last year.
The review by The Negative Times on Kanguva pointed out several drawbacks in the movie, including the overbearing violence, the loud background music by Devi Sri Prasad, and the dialogues that felt more like shouts than conversations. The action scenes lacked innovation and relied heavily on brutal violence, such as the graphic depiction of severing numerous hands. Additionally, the war scenes featuring massive ships and somber costumes seemed reminiscent of similar portrayals seen in various Viking series available on OTT platforms for quite some time.