Bollywood’s Rs 4000 Cr Illusion: South Industry Even Worse?

Hindi Cinema 2025

The year 2025 that just ended was only an average one for Hindi cinema. According to BoxOfficeIndia, Total box office collections stood at around Rs.4,000 crore, including dubbed films. While this technically makes it the third best year after 2023 and 2019, the comparison is misleading. Ticket prices today are much higher than they were in 2019 and even higher than in 2023. When that is factored in, the real performance is clearly weaker.

One worrying trend is the widespread use of “feeding” to inflate box office numbers. This is no longer limited to big films or damage control situations. It is happening across the board, even for small films. Earlier, feeding was occasional to give some temporary boost. Now, it has become routine, raising serious questions about transparency and long-term damage.

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Compared to 2023, overall collections in 2025 dropped by about 8%. Footfalls have fallen sharply, mainly because ticket prices are too high. This decline actually began even before the pandemic, as very few films connected with a broad audience.

Another glaring issue is over dependence on a handful of blockbusters. Films like Dhurandhar, Chhaava, and Saiyaara alone contributed nearly 40% of the year’s total revenue. This exposes a dangerous imbalance. An industry cannot survive on just a few massive hits. What is missing are films that earn between Rs.100 and Rs.200 crore net. Without these, the industry cannot survive.

Business has become extremely top heavy. Even if 2026 has bigger releases, this imbalance will continue unless mid budget films start performing better.

Before the pandemic, urban centric films survived because metro revenues were enough. That model has now collapsed. Even medium budget films must appeal to mass audiences to survive. Films like Tere Ishq Mein and Ek Deewaane Ki Deewaniyat suggest that strong music, emotion, and relatable characters can still work, but more such films are needed. In a way, the decline of purely urban films may help push filmmakers to think wider.

Despite these issues, Hindi cinema is still in a better position than most regional and South industries. While the narrative is pushed that Bollywood is doomed, Hindi films still have better recovery potential. Rising costs hurt everyone, but regional industries feel the pressure more intensely. If Hindi cinema corrects its course, it can retain its audience instead of losing them to other industries.

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