2026 started strong for Bollywood with multiple big releases, yet the box office verdict was brutally selective. ‘Border-2’ dominated collections, but films like ‘Assi’ and ‘O Romeo’ crashed out early. Trade guru Girish Vankhede offers a no-holds-barred breakdown of what went wrong, from promotion pitfalls to absent star power.
January and February saw ‘Ikkees’, ‘Raja Saheb’, ‘Mardani-3’, and the juggernaut ‘Border-2’ hit screens. The sequel’s success stemmed from its winning formula: top-tier stars, solid script, and the baggage of a beloved original that tugged at heartstrings, compelling fans to theaters.
‘Tu Ya Main’ and ‘O Romeo’ faced audience indifference. Vankhede slams their marketing as a total bust—most people were clueless about their existence. Shahid Kapoor’s ‘O Romeo’ had potential but suffered from lukewarm word-of-mouth and patchy critiques, creating viewer paralysis.
Even ‘Assi’, with Taapsee Pannu addressing weighty themes, floundered. The expert cuts straight: no superstar clout to anchor it. ‘Taapsee can’t shoulder a film’s fate alone,’ he states. In a star-driven market, serious cinema needs extra propulsion to compete.
Vankhede reassures that setbacks like these are mere blips. Actors like Shahid rebound swiftly with one smash hit. For producers, the takeaways are stark—prioritize buzz-building and bank on bankable names. Bollywood’s formula for victory hasn’t changed: content plus hype equals cash registers ringing.