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Subodh Khanolkar’s film holds strong in its second week as Marathi cinema sees a surge
Marathi cinema continues to enjoy a strong run at the box office with Subodh Khanolkar’s thriller Dashavatar maintaining its momentum well into its second week. On its twelfth day, the film earned an estimated ₹85 lakh (India net), bringing its total to ₹17.5 crore, according to data from Sacnilk.
The film opened to positive word-of-mouth and has shown remarkable consistency. In its second weekend, Dashavatar collected ₹1 crore on day eight, ₹2.65 crore on day nine, and ₹3 crore on day ten, demonstrating strong growth across Saturday and Sunday. Weekdays saw the expected dip, with Monday and Tuesday contributing ₹80 lakh and ₹85 lakh respectively. Occupancy levels remain impressive, with an overall 28.32 per cent on day 12, peaking at 47.37 per cent during evening and night shows — a sign that audience interest is holding steady.
Directed by Subodh Khanolkar, the film boasts a stellar ensemble cast featuring Dilip Prabhawalkar, Mahesh Manjrekar, Siddharth Menon, Priyadarshini Indalkar, Bharat Jadhav, Abhinay Berde, Ravi Kale, Vijay Kenkare, Sunil Tawde and Aarti Wadagbalkar.
The film’s success is part of a wider moment for Marathi cinema, which has been quietly redefining box-office expectations. Earlier this year, Sachin Pilgaonkar’s Navra Maza Navsacha 2 emerged as a surprise blockbuster. Made on a shoestring budget of just ₹5 crore which is roughly equivalent to what a Bollywood star’s entourage might cost for a single day’s shoot, the comedy-drama grossed nearly ₹25 crore. Its success underscored the power of content-driven storytelling in regional cinema.
Together, Dashavatar and Navra Maza Navsacha 2 reflect a resurgence for Marathi films at the box office. With production budgets remaining relatively modest compared to Hindi cinema, these numbers signal growing audience appetite for homegrown stories that mix commercial appeal with local flavour. Industry analysts say such performances could encourage producers to take bigger creative swings, potentially leading to more ambitious Marathi projects in the coming years.