Vrusshabha Box Office Collection Day 1
Vrusshabha’s day 1 box office collection is estimated at ₹61 lakh net in India, with early trade estimates putting the worldwide total near ₹70 lakh by Sacnilk. For a Mohanlal‑led fantasy epic that was marketed as a big Christmas release, those numbers are, frankly, shockingly low. Trade reports are already calling it one of his weakest openings in recent years, even below titles that were considered disappointments at the time.
What stings more for fans is the context: Mohanlal has had better openings even for films that were later panned, while Vrusshabha arrived with the “event film” tag and pan‑India positioning. One theatre manager quoted in regional coverage basically summed it up by saying that audience turnout felt “holiday light” rather than “festival crowd,” which is not what you want to hear for a Christmas launch.
Vrusshabha Language Wise Collection
On a language-wise split, Vrusshabha earned the bulk of its day 1 money from the Malayalam version, with Hindi and Telugu contributing only small fractions. Estimates from trade trackers and entertainment portals break it down roughly like this for opening day:
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Malayalam: about ₹46 lakh net
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Telugu: about ₹13 lakh net
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Hindi: about ₹2 lakh net
So yes, the home turf did “better,” but even in Malayalam, the film failed to cross even the ₹50 lakh mark, which is way below what a Mohanlal fantasy actioner would normally be expected to do on day 1. The pan‑India ambition, at least on opening day, did not translate into pan‑India numbers; non‑Malayalam versions registered as barely there in terms of footfalls.
About Vrusshabha
Vrusshabha is a fantasy action epic headlined by Mohanlal, directed by Nanda Kishore, mounted as a multilingual release primarily in Malayalam, Telugu, and Hindi. The film leans into reincarnation, big-scale battles, and heavy emotional stakes, with trade coverage repeatedly positioning it as a “pan‑India spectacle” designed to work across markets rather than just as a dubbed product.
Reviews and early reactions have been sharply mixed: Mohanlal’s performance and the scale of the visuals get praise, but the storytelling is being called dated, loud, and stuck in older fantasy tropes. A few fans on social media are still defending it as “theatre-worthy masala,” but a lot of others are bluntly saying it feels like an overlong, underwritten experiment that did not land, which probably explains why day 1 box office for Vrusshabha looks this soft despite the holiday slot.
Disclaimer
All Vrusshabha box office figures mentioned here are based on early trade estimates and industry tracking reports as of day 1 and may differ from final producer or distributor numbers. Collections can be updated or revised, so readers should treat these as indicative, not official, totals




