Dhamaal 4 is doing decently in theatres. The film released on July 10 garnering mixed reviews. Unfortunately, the Ajay Devgn film is seeing a dip in its box office numbers now.
According to trade tracker
Sacnilk, Dhamaal 4 collected an estimated ₹6 crore (net) in India on its seventh day in theatres. The film was screened across 11,006 shows, taking its total India net collection to ₹96 crore. Its India gross has now reached ₹114.49 crore.
Dhamaal 4 witnessed another dip at the box office on its seventh day, earning an estimated ₹6 crore net in India, an 11.1% drop from the ₹6.75 crore it collected on Day 6. The film had opened with ₹14 crore net on Day 1 across 10,669 shows and went on to register a strong opening weekend total of ₹65 crore net, thanks to collections of ₹22.50 crore on Day 2 and ₹28.50 crore on Day 3. It then earned an estimated ₹8.75 crore net on Day 4 across 10,598 shows, followed by ₹9.50 crore on Day 5 and ₹6.75 crore on Day 6, reflecting a 31.6% decline from the previous day. Overseas, the comedy entertainer added ₹1 crore gross on Day 7, taking its international total to ₹18.25 crore. As a result, its worldwide gross collection has now reached ₹132.74 crore.
In Dhamaal 4, Ajay Devgn returns as Guddu, while Riteish Deshmukh plays Lallan. Arshad Warsi and Jaaved Jaaferi reprise their fan-favourite roles as Adi and Manav. The ensemble cast also includes Ravi Kishan as Adhoora, Sanjay Mishra as Johnny, along with Anjali Anand, Sanjeeda Shaikh, Vijay Patkar and Upendra Limaye in pivotal roles.
The film follows Guddu, Lallan, Paaro, Adi, Manav, Rosy and Adhoora as they embark on a chaotic and hilarious quest to find Shaitaan Singh’s hidden treasure. It has been jointly produced by T-Series Films, Panorama Studios, Devgn Films, Maruti International and Anand Pandit Motion Pictures.
News18 Showsha gave the movie 2 stars and wrote in its review, “At 2 hours 23 minutes, Dhamaal 4 is an excrutiatingly exhausting watch that never moves the story beyond square one. The first half is marked with long, elaborate sequences of ghosts and of people falling, drowning and hanging from the most impossible of places. And then comes the second half. The entire sequence of the gang discovering wealth inside the cave is so gruelling and so endless that it starts to test your patience. And then comes the problematic ‘gags’.”
















