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100 Crore Club

Indian language films grossing over 1 billion rupees From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

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The 100 Crore Club is a colloquial term used in the Indian film industry to denote films that achieve significant box office success. In Hindi cinema, it refers to films that have a net domestic box office collection of ₹100 crore (1 billion Indian rupees) or more after deducting entertainment tax.[1] In contrast, in South Indian cinema, the term applies to films that gross ₹100 crore or more worldwide, without deductions for taxes. The key differences are that Hindi cinema tracks net earnings after tax deductions, while South Indian cinema considers gross earnings, and Hindi cinema focuses on domestic collections, whereas South Indian films account for worldwide collections.

By 2012, crossing ₹100 crore had become a benchmark for commercial success in Hindi cinema, with films reaching this milestone considered major hits.[2][3] Actors Salman Khan (17) and Akshay Kumar (16) hold the most entries in the club. In 2017, the 1000 Crore Club emerged as a new benchmark for record-breaking films with Baahubali 2.[4]

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The first Indian film to cross ₹100 crore worldwide was the 1982 Hindi film Disco Dancer, directed by Babbar Subhash, written by Rahi Masoom Raza, and starring Mithun Chakraborty, with over 90 crore grossed at the Soviet box office.[n 1][5] The first Indian film to gross over 100 crore domestically in India was the Salman Khan and Madhuri Dixit starrer Hum Aapke Hain Kaun (1994).[6][7][8] The next film to cross ₹100 crore worldwide was the Shah Rukh Khan and Kajol starrer Dilwale Dulhania Le Jayenge (1995).[9]

The 100 Crore Club emerged more than a decade later, when the Aamir Khan starrer Ghajini (2008) was released and became the first Hindi film to earn ₹100 crore net at the box office, soon after which the term "100 Crore Club" was coined.[10] Overseas, the first Indian film to gross 100 crore in international markets was the Shah Rukh Khan-Kajol-starrer My Name is Khan (2010),[11] followed by 3 Idiots in 2011.[12][13]

Beyond Hindi cinema, the first South Indian film to gross over 100 crore worldwide was 2007 Rajinikanth starring Tamil film Sivaji.[14] The first Telugu film to enter the "100 Crore club" was the 2009 film by S.S. Rajamouli, Magadheera.[15] In May 2016, Sairat become the first Marathi film to gross over 100 crore (US$12 million) worldwide.[16] In 2016, Mohanlal starring Pulimurugan became the first Malayalam film to enter the club. The first Kannada movie to enter 100 Crore club was KGF: Chapter 1 directed by Prashanth Neel, released in 2018, starring Yash and Srinidhi Shetty crossing 153 crores in 11 days.

When adjusted for inflation, the first Indian film to gross an adjusted 100 crore was the 1940 film Zindagi, directed by P.C. Barua and written by Javed Hussain.[n 3] The first Indian film to gross an adjusted 100 crore overseas was the 1951 film Awaara, directed by Raj Kapoor, written by Khwaja Ahmad Abbas, and starring Raj Kapoor and Nargis,becoming a blockbuster in the Soviet Union.[n 6]

The Hindustan Times claims that their magazine Brunch coined the term.[25] Initially the term applied only to the lead male actor.[1] Komal Nahta stated that "excluding women from the group is characteristic of an industry which exercises gender discrimination more than other industries."[1] By 2013, the usage had expanded to variously include the film itself, the director,[26] and the lead female actor.[27] The Zee Cine Awards added a category "The Power Club Box Office" to recognise directors whose films had reached the 100 crore mark.[26] The 100 Crore Club designation has replaced previous Bollywood indications of success which had included great music, the "Silver Jubilee"[28] or the "Diamond Jubilee" (films that ran for 75 weeks in theatres).[29]

However, DNA reported that "Filmmakers and distributors are known to leave no stone unturned in their attempt to cross over to the right side" of the 100 crore mark."[26][30] The Times of India cancelled its "Box Office" column in November 2013 because "The stakes of filmmakers have increased so much that they are willing to go any distance to manipulate and jack up their numbers to beat each other's records." and the Times felt they were no longer able to provide accurate enough figures because "Films that have not reached the '100 crore mark but are close will insist that they have reached the '100 crore figure as they can't resist being in the '100 crore club.'"[31]

The concentration on reaching the club has been criticised, with actor and producer Arshad Warsi stating, "I find this whole Rs.100 crore club very stupid. How can every film releasing lately do a business of Rs.100 crores all of a sudden? Instead of this, we need to concentrate on making good films."[32] Shahid Kapoor called the designation a "fad" which was leading to "massy films which are very basic in their understanding and high on entertainment. But if we run only to achieve those figures then we will restrict ourselves as actors."[2] On the other hand, Dibakar Banerjee, while agreeing with Kapoor about the impact on content stated, "I hope the club stays and grows to many more crores. Films as they do more business boost the confidence of audience and investors alike and everybody benefits."[33] Priyanka Chopra said that being part of films in the 100 Crore Club allowed her to also do less commercial "women-oriented films", and lamented that as of December 2013, no woman oriented films had achieved the 100 Crore Club designation.[34]

Variations of the "Bollywood 100 Crore Club" came into use, such as the "Bollywood 400 Crore Club" when the Shah Rukh Khan-Deepika Padukone-starrer Chennai Express reported box office receipts of 400 crore in 2013,[35] and the "Tollywood 600 Crore Club", which relates to Telugu films that have earned over 600 crore (US$71 million) in 2015, such as film Baahubali: The Beginning which earned 650 crore (US$77 million).[36] They were eventually succeeded by the 1000 Crore Club, when Baahubali 2: The Conclusion crossed the ₹1,000 crore mark ($135 million) in 2017.

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Language-wise Number of Films

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Milestones

See 1000 Crore Club for milestones beyond ₹1,000 crore.

Worldwide

More information Nominal gross, Film ...

Domestic

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Overseas

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Notes

  1. Disco Dancer:
    • India: 6.4 crore[42] (US$6.54 million)[n 7] in 1982 (124 crore (US$15 million) in 2016)
    • Soviet Union: US$75.9 million[n 8] (94.34 crore)[n 9] in 1984 (US$230 million (1176 crore)[20] in 2016)
  2. 3.4804 Indian rupees per US dollar in 1940: 13.33 per pound,[18] $3.83 per pound[19]
  3. 55 lakh[17] (US$1.58 million)[n 2] in 1940 (US$35 million or 181 crore[20] in 2016)
  4. 4.7619 Indian rupees per US dollar from 1951 to 1965[22]
  5. 4 Soviet rubles per US dollar from 1950 to 1960[24]
  6. Awaara: 5.75 crore (US$12.08 million) in 1954 (739 crore (US$110 million) in 2016)
  7. 9.79 Indian rupees per US dollar in 1982[43]
  8. Disco Dancer: 60 million Soviet rubles in 1984,[44] 0.791 rubles per US dollar in 1984[24]
  9. 12.43 Indian rupees per US dollar in 1984[45]
  10. 3 Idiots worldwide gross: 453.82 crore (US$87.55 million)
    • Domestic: 273.82 crore[47] (US$57.05 million)[48]
    • Overseas: US$30.5 million[11] (180 crore)[49]
  11. Dhoom 3 overseas gross: US$35.6 million,[11] 2.172 billion (equivalent to 3.7 billion or US$44 million in 2023)[68]
  12. 39.8 million tickets sold,[70] average ticket price of 25 kopecks[71]
  13. 0.9 Soviet rubles per US dollar from 1961 to 1971[24]
  14. Char Dil Char Rahen in Soviet Union: 9.95 million SUR[n 12] (US$11.06 million,[n 13] 52.7 million)[n 4] in 1962[70] (US$115 million or 5.91 billion[20] in 2016)
  15. 52.1 million tickets sold,[70] average ticket price of 25 kopecks[71]
  16. 7.5 Indian rupees per US dollar from 1967 to 1970[22]
  17. Mamta in Soviet Union: 13.025 million SUR[n 15] (US$14.47 million,[n 13] 108.5 million)[n 16] in 1969[70] (US$124 million or 6.38 billion[20] in 2016)
  18. 62.6 million tickets sold,[70] average ticket price of 25 kopecks[71]
  19. 0.73 Soviet rubles per US dollar in 1975[24]
  20. 8.973 Indian rupees per US dollar in 1975[72]
  21. Bobby in Soviet Union: 15.65 million SUR[n 18] (US$21.44 million,[n 19] 192.4 million)[n 20] in 1975 (US$125 million (6.38 billion)[20] in 2016)
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    References

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