Salaar Part 1 – Ceasefire Global Box Office Collection Day 2: Nears ₹300 Crore Milestone, Starring Prabhas in Lead Role
Salaar Part 1 – Ceasefire Worldwide Box Office Collection Day 2: Directed by Prashanth Neel, the film, released in theaters in Telugu, Kannada, Tamil, Malayalam, and Hindi on Friday. The official Salaar handle on X (formerly known as Twitter) shared the latest global earnings on Sunday.
Salaar Part 1 – Ceasefire” achieves impressive worldwide collection, nearing ₹300 crores.
The official Salaar handle shared a poster with Prabhas, announcing a “Record breaking blockbuster” with ₹295.7 crores in Global Box Office Collection (GBOC) in just two days worldwide. The caption reads, “The hunting season begins… Salaar dominates the global box office, crossing ₹295.7 crore GBOC (worldwide) in 2 days!” The movie is set in the fictional city of Khansaar, focusing on two friends, Deva and Vardha, portrayed by Prabhas and Prithviraj Sukumaran, who eventually become arch rivals.
About Salaar
“Salaar” features a star-studded cast including Shruti Haasan, Eshwari Rao, Jagapathi Babu, and Sriya Reddy. The film marks the significant collaboration between director Prashanth Neel and Prabhas, creating a mega action-packed cinematic spectacle. Prabhas takes on the titular role of Salaar in the movie.
Salaar Movie Review
review of “Salaar” states, “Salaar calls for your full attention. While the first half effortlessly builds momentum and keeps you hooked, the second half does go slightly downhill, appears a tad stretched with some complex scenes, which could have been easily edited to bring down the runtime by at least 20 minutes.
Nevertheless, Salaar’s intriguing story is only enhanced by extremely layered characters who deliver such nuanced performance. Prabhas, after a string of flops with Saaho, Radhe Shyam, and Adipurush, finally has made a solid comeback.
Prithviraj Sukumaran on Salaar
In a recent interview with news agency PTI, Prithviraj Sukumaran shared his thoughts on “Salaar,” saying, I had different notions about what the film would be.
I didn’t expect it to be a story of two friends, their bonding, and what happens between them. That caught me by surprise.
What drew me in was the drama. Despite all the spectacular fight sequences and huge sets, what pulls you in Salaar is the drama.
That drama, regardless of how big or small the film is or in which language the film is made, it works.