Raid 2 Box Office Collection Day 25
Okay, wow. Ajay Devgn’s Raid 2 just refuses to slow down—it raked in a wild ₹162.10 crore at the domestic box office in just 25 days. Not bad for a sequel, huh? Guess the guy’s still got some serious star power, and folks are clearly showing up for it.
Sequel That Actually Delivers
Raj Kumar Gupta’s back at the wheel, picking up right where the first Raid left off. Devgn’s back as Amay Patnaik, the IRS officer who makes fighting corruption look seriously badass. The film doesn’t just coast on nostalgia, either. The story’s tight, the pace doesn’t drag, and the performances actually make you care. People aren’t just watching—it’s got legs. Even in week four, it’s pulling crowds. Word-of-mouth is doing a ton of heavy lifting, let’s be honest.
Sure, there’s competition, but Raid 2’s just brushing it off. That’s what happens when people actually like your movie instead of just turning up for the opening weekend and forgetting it ever existed.
The Cast Brings It
Can we talk about Riteish Deshmukh and Vaani Kapoor for a sec? They’re not just background noise. Both add real flavor to the story, and you can tell they’re having fun with it. Makes a difference.
But, let’s face it, this is Devgn’s show. The man’s a brick wall—calm, determined, and you can’t help but root for him. Critics are eating it up, audiences are eating it up, even my uncle who never goes to the theater went to see it. That says something.
Box Office Vibes
From day one, Raid 2 was off to the races. No nosedive after the first week, no sudden “oh, guess people don’t care anymore” moment. It’s been steady. Honestly, in this era of blink-and-you-miss-it releases, that’s rare.
Compared to other stuff in theaters right now? Raid 2’s crushing it. Makes you wonder why studios don’t try more mid-budget, content-driven flicks instead of churning out the same old stuff. Clearly, it works.
Critics & The Crowd: Both Dig It
Critics have been hyping up the script, the performances, and the fact that you don’t need a million explosions to keep people hooked. Audiences seem to agree—nobody’s bored, and everyone’s talking about it, which is basically free marketing.
Looking Forward
So, what’s next? If Raid 2’s runaway success says anything, it’s that people are hungry for movies that don’t treat them like idiots. Good acting, a story that actually moves, and characters you remember after the credits roll. Devgn’s got a new notch on his belt, and the industry should probably take notes. Here’s hoping this kicks off a new wave of solid, mid-budget hits. Indian cinema could use it.