Sankranti 2026: Disasters Kick Off, Young Heroes Seal the Hits!
The Sankranti 2026 season in Telugu cinema delivered a stark reality check for the industry.
It began with high-budget flops from senior stars like Chiranjeevi, Venkatesh, Prabhas, Ravi Teja, and Vijay Thalapathy, only to culminate in massive triumphs by young talents such as Sharwanand and Naveen Polishetty.
Their content-driven films, made on shoestring budgets, not only outperformed expectations but also beats the seniors with superior returns on investment (ROI), signaling a generational shift?
Senior Stars’ Costly Flops?
Sankranti opened on a disastrous note with Prabhas’ The Raja Saab, a horror-comedy boasting a whopping ₹280-450 crore budget.
As per Trailer 2.0, it’s proved that from Day 1 collections barely scraped ₹1-2 crore, far below breakeven targets, leading to colossal losses for producers amid poor word-of-mouth after releasing.
Chiranjeevi’s Mana Shankara Varaprasad Garu along with Victory Venkatesh, with its ₹200-300 crore price tag, needed to surpass Waltair Veerayya’s ₹161 crore haul but faltered trailer with (resemblence sequel of Sankranthi ki Vastunnamu Part -2? With same point hero an ex cop who is on mission) critically and commercially, dragging the industry down.
This movie also make far below collections from Day -1 with Forcibly Hit Talk.
Ravi Teja’s entry with BMW (Bhartha Mahasayulaku Wignapthi) followed suit, each burning over ₹100 crore in production costs yet registering as outright disasters.
Film Trailer shows with Adultery Relationship point also adds adults jokes and exposing of actors with C Grade Movie Style which won’t get funs but gets troll and disasters openings, also can’t watch families at festival season where it is core season for movies to collect at box office.
These films doesnt prioritised star power over story, resulting in empty theaters and massive financial hemorrhages.
The collective over ₹1,000 crore splurged across seven releases highlighted producers’ misplaced bravado, turning festival hype into box-office nightmares.
Senior actors’ reliance on outdated mass formulas failed to connect with audiences craving fresh narratives.
Young Guns Deliver Knockout Punches
In stark contrast, the season ended on a high with Sharwanand’s Nari Nari Naduma Murari which will be similar Content with Ravi Teja’s BMW but it has humour with family audience authentication with class template without any vulgarity.
Crafted on a modest budget, it secured a lucrative ₹17.5 crore OTT deal pre-release and is projected to gross ₹30-40 crore theatrically. This smart, content-rich entertainer resonated with families, proving low-cost ingenuity trumps extravagance.
Naveen Polishetty’s Anaganaga Oka Raju stole the show, achieving break-even on non-theatrical rights alone despite a ₹40 crore outlay. Its breezy humor and relatable storytelling minted huge ROI, outpacing senior spectacles. These young heroes didn’t just succeed; they metaphorically slapped their elders with superior content that packed theaters and preserved profits.
While seniors hemorrhaged cash, these peanuts-budget gems revitalized the box office.
Time for Seniors to Step Aside
Chiranjeevi, Venkatesh, Prabhas, Ravi Teja, and Vijay Thalapathy have had glorious runs, but Sankranti 2026 exposes their diminishing pull.
Bloated budgets and formulaic scripts yielded disasters, inflicting heavy losses on an already strained industry.
Young actors like Sharwanand and Naveen Polishetty, armed with innovative stories and fiscal prudence, are the future.
Seniors should retire gracefully, paving the path for this new generation and emerging talents hungry for opportunities.
The contrast is glaring: Seniors’ mega-projects flop despite hype, while youth excel on fractions of the spend.
Producers lost fortunes on star vehicles, but young films delivered sustainable hits. This isn’t mere luck—it’s evolution. Telugu cinema thrives when fresh voices lead, unburdened by legacy expectations.
LokaChitra.com urges industry veterans to mentor from the sidelines, letting innovation flourish.
A Wake-Up Call for Tollywood
Sankranti 2026 wasn’t just a festival clash; it was a verdict. Young heroes’ triumphs underscore that content reigns supreme over stardom. As budgets spiral and audiences evolve, seniors must recognize their era’s twilight. Hand over the baton—Telugu cinema’s revival depends on it.