'Badass Ravikumar’ box office collection day 5: Himesh Reshammiya’s action parody inches towards the Rs.10 crore mark in its first week (original) (raw)
With songs like ‘Tandoori Nights,’ ‘Aashiqui Mein Teri,’ ‘Tera Surroor,’ and more, Himesh Reshammiya made sure to leave an impression with his music and now with his action parody ‘Badass Ravikummar’ he wanted to do the same. The film is enjoying its first week run at the box office and despite the constant dip in the business, it is eyeing the Rs.10 crore mark in its debut week.
According to the Sacnilk report, the action spoof, which is a spin-off of ‘The Xpose’ (2014), opened with Rs 2.75 crore. However, from the second day onwards, the movie saw a dip. On day 2, i.e., its first Saturday, the movie made Rs 2 crore, and then on Sunday, it minted only Rs. 1.40 crore. Thereafter, things went further downhill, as the movie failed to make even a crore on Monday. Further, while the Monday collection of the movie was Rs. 0.60 crore, the first Tuesday business went down to Rs. 0.50 crore. This makes India's net collection of ‘Badass Ravikummar’ - Rs. 7.25 crore
Coming to the occupancy rate, the overall stats stand at 6.85% on Tuesday. Further details on the occupancy of day 5 are given below:
Morning Shows: 4.58%
Afternoon Shows: 6.57%
Evening Shows: 6.41%
Night Shows: 9.85%
‘Badass Ravikumar’
“Badass Ravikumar,” directed by Keith Gomes, is an action film infused with a musical parody element. The lead role is played by Himesh Reshammiya, supported by well-known actors like Johnny Lever, Prabhu Deva, Saurabh Sachdeva, Kirti Kulhari, Simona J, and Sanjay Mishra in key roles.
The storyline follows Ravi Kumar (Himesh Reshammiya), a bold and unconventional police officer entrusted with protecting the country’s secrets. Will he accomplish his mission, or will it threaten national security?
As far as the review of the movie is concerned, ETimes shares, “At the outset, Badass Ravi Kumar sets the tone with a disclaimer: “This film is all about badass logic, and here logic is optional.” Promising to deliver the over-the-top, dialogue-heavy entertainment of the 80s, it certainly stays true to its claim. But does that make it entertaining? Unfortunately, the answer is a resounding NO.”