Saturday, October 4, 2025

Sunny Sanskari Ki Tulsi Kumari box office day 2: Varun, Janhvi film sees a drop amid mixed reviews, earns ₹13 crore

Sunny Sanskari Ki Tulsi Kumari box office collection on Day 2: Shashank Khaitan's romantic comedy-drama came out in theaters on October 2 and started with a decent opening. But the film got mixed reactions from people, and now that's showing in the box office numbers, as the collections have gone down.

Box office collection


According to the trade tracking site Sacnilk, Sunny Sanskari Ki Tulsi Kumari made ₹9.25 crore on its first day.
 But on the second day and first Friday, it dropped sharply, earning less than half of what it made the first day. The film earned just ₹4.04 crore, bringing the total to ₹13.29 crore. It hasn't even managed to reach ₹20 crore in two days. The overall Hindi occupancy on Friday was 14.94%, with 9.06% in morning shows, 17.44% in afternoon shows, and 18.33% in evening shows.

The film is far behind Rishab Shetty's Kantara Chapter 1, which made ₹61.85 crore on its opening day and ₹43.65 crore on Day 2.

 Its total domestic collection is now at 105.5 crore, and it's expected to cross the 150 crore mark by this weekend.

About Sunny Sanskari Ki Tulsi Kumari

Directed by Shashank Khaitan, Sunny Sanskari Ki Tulsi Kumari features Varun Dhawan, Janhvi Kapoor, Rohit Saraf, and Sanya Malhotra in leading roles, with Akshay Oberoi, Maneish Paul, and Abhinav in supporting roles.
 The film is backed by Karan Johar and has been criticized for its slow and dull storyline.

The story follows Sunny (played by Varun Dhawan), who is heartbroken when his girlfriend Ananya (played by Sanya Malhotra) gives in to her family's pressure and marries the rich Vikram (played by Rohit Saraf).
 Vikram then leaves Tulsi (played by Janhvi Kapoor). Heartbroken, Sunny and Tulsi team up to crash their exes' wedding and win back their love. The big question is, can they do it?

An excerpt from the Hindustan Times review of Sunny Sanskari Ki Tulsi Kumari reads, "The core idea of the film, that nobody should have to sacrifice love because of family pressure, is lost because the families never really convince you.
 The writing by Shashank and Ishita Moitra focuses too much on the romances and forgets to build the families that are supposed to shape them."

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