Sikandar Box Office Collection Day 3: Salman Khan film holds stable to Eid, collects £ 72 crore

02 April 2025 01:29 AM IST SIKANDAR BOX OFFICE COLLECTION DAY 3: Salman Khan’s film holds steady, but see a slight decline on the first Tuesday. Here’s how it fools. Sikandar Box Office Collection Day 3: Salman Khan’s action-thriller Sikandar was released in theaters on March 30, Eid 2025. The film was opened for a mixed response from the audience, but saw a slight growth on the first Monday. However, the film seems to be struggling to maintain momentum after the Eid holiday. (Also read: Salman Khan confirms that the film has been delayed, the new action announces with Sanjay Dutt: The performance is on another level) Salman Khan’s film has seen a decline at the Box Office Post Eid holiday. Sikandar testifies to a drop in number on day 3 According to Sacnilk, Sikandar raised £ 29 on day 2 of the release. On the first Tuesday (day 3), the film managed to raise £ 17.81 at the box office, which was the total at £ 72.81. The global collection is currently at £ 95 crore. The film failed to exceed Vicky Kaushal’s Chhaava or Mohanlal’s L2: Empuran to become the highest opener of the year. However, according to the producers, the film earned on day 1 and £ 39 crore gross in India in India and on day 2 and 39 crore gross, and crossed the £ 100 crore mark at the global box office. Taking into account that it is a Salman Khan film, the numbers look slightly disappointing. About Sikandar, the action -thriller was directed by AR Murugadoss, which is best known for films such as Ghajini and Darbar. This is the return of Salman to the big screen after the failure of his last release, Kisi Ka Bhai Kisi Ki Jaan, in 2023. While there was a significant anticipation for the film, a portion of the audience was dissatisfied with the storyline and even criticized the performances of Salman, Sathyaraj and Rashmika Mandanna. The film also plays Kajal Aggarwal, Sharman Joshi and Pratik Babbar in key roles. Ar Murugadoss told Pti: “If you work with SuperStars, you can’t be 100 percent of the screenplay. We need to compromise for the audience, for the fans, for the opening, and we can’t be 100 percent real as a director. We have to satisfy the fans and think about it.”