Tu Meri Main Tera Main Tera Tu Meri is now playing in theatres. You will see first-day collection figures by tomorrow, but they are expected to reflect reported numbers rather than actual footfalls. This has become routine with most releases.
Like many recent films, TMMTMTTM has relied on corporate bookings. Online users allege that while several theatres remain nearly empty with four or five tickets sold, a few chains show sudden full houses. You can clearly see why this has raised questions.
This pattern feels unrealistic at a time when audiences remain hooked to Dhurandhar and, to a lesser extent, Avatar: Fire and Ash. Viewers are spending their money selectively. That makes sudden spikes for TMMTMTTM harder to accept.
It is true that Dhurandhar also opened with some level of feeding. However, you saw it build genuine momentum soon after. Real audiences pushed it into double-digit collections even on weekdays.
TMMTMTTM lacks that advantage. The film carries almost no buzz. The music failed to connect, and while the director seems to target youth, their attention is firmly on Dhurandhar right now.
Delaying the release by a few weeks may have helped slightly. Even then, strong footfalls were never guaranteed despite Kartik Aaryan’s fan base. Early reactions call it an ordinary romantic comedy with no freshness.
The coming year has a packed lineup of films. You cannot expect all of them to recreate Dhurandhar’s craze. Content alone will decide that. For now, TMMTMTTM may struggle even to recover its budget.
With the Dhurandhar wave showing no signs of slowing, the real test lies ahead. You will soon see whether TMMTMTTM sustains for multiple weeks or continues leaning on corporate bookings.




