Gujarati film Laalo-Krishna Sada Sahaayate directed by
Ankit Sakhiya has turned out to be a once in a generation film as it completed 50 days in cinema halls- something very few Gujarati films have achieved. And with this glorious run the film has made a name for itself in the biggest hits of 2025- something no Gujarati film has been able to do since the start of Gujarati cinema.The started as a small, unassuming release with no grand marketing blitz has now cemented itself as one of the biggest Indian success stories of 2025. Starring
Karan Joshi, Reeva Rachh,
Shruhad Goswami, Anshu Joshi, and Kinnal Nayak, the film’s meteoric rise has stunned trade analysts nationwide.
On its 50th day the film added Rs 90 lakh to its kitty and on Day 49 the film had collected Rs 1.15 crore and till day 48 the film had collected Rs 77.95 crore and with that the film has officially crossed the monumental Rs 80 crore mark . An achievement unimaginable for a film made on a shoestring budget of just Rs 50 lakh. The profit margins now exceed 15,000%, placing Laalo in a league that few films in world cinema history have ever reached.
The weekly breakdown of Laalo’s performance highlights its extraordinary trajectory. After a modest Rs 33 lakh in Week 1 and Rs 27 lakh in Week 2, the film witnessed its first major jump in Week 3 with Rs 62 lakh. But what followed was nothing short of historic: Rs 12.08 crore in Week 4, Rs 25.70 crore in Week 5, and Rs 24.40 crore in Week 6. The film then delivered the biggest 7th-weekend collection in the history of Indian cinema at Rs 9.95 crore.
With its current total crossing Rs 80 crore, the film has beaten many big Hindi, Tamil and Telugu releases of the year. What was once an underdog regional release has now sparked a nationwide conversation about the evolving taste of audiences and the growing importance of strong content over big-budget spectacle.
The film is no longer just a Gujarati hit, it is a cultural milestone. At 50 days and counting, Laalo stands tall, not just as a blockbuster, but as a symbol of Gujarati cinema’s rising power and a new chapter in India’s box-office history.