Good Bad Ugly Box Office Collection Day 5: Ajith Kumar's Film Scores A Century, Crosses Rs 100 Crore!
"Good Bad Ugly," directed by Adhik Ravichandran and starring Ajith Kumar and Trisha Krishnan, earned Rs 29.25 crore on debut, becoming Ajith's biggest opener, and surpassed Rs 100 crore total.

Helmed by Adhik Ravichandran, Good Bad Ugly was released on April 10 and it registered a massive Rs 29.25 crore on its debut day, becoming South superstar Ajith Kumar’s biggest opener of his career. The film also stars Trisha Krishnan. It is unstoppable at the box office. According to Sacnilk,Good Bad Ugly collected around Rs 17 crore net in India on Monday, April 14. The total collection has now surpassed the Rs 100-crore mark.
Not bad, considering that the film stumbled a bit after its Rs 29.25 crore opening. Friday saw a steep 48 per cent drop with just Rs 15 crore. But it’s back on its feet and sprinting again as the weekend totally turned things around for Good Bad Ugly. The film bounced back with Rs 19.75 crore on Saturday and Rs 22.30 crore on Sunday. Monday saw a slight dip but it held its ground pretty well.
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On the global front, Good Bad Ugly is all set to dethrone Dragon as the highest-grossing Tamil film of 2025.
Good Bad Ugly follows the gritty and emotional journey of Red Dragon (played by Ajith Kumar), a feared gangster trying to turn over a new leaf. His wife, Ramya (Trisha), draws a firm line—he won’t be allowed to see their son, Vihaan, unless he cleans up his act. Determined to make amends, Red Dragon sets out to change, but just as he’s trying to right his wrongs, his dark past comes crashing back. When his son is kidnapped, the stakes skyrocket, and he’s forced to dive back into the world he tried to leave behind.
The film boasts a stellar ensemble including Arjun Das, Sunil, Karthikeya Dev, Priya Prakash Varrier, Prabhu, Prasanna, Tinnu Anand, and Raghu Ram.
A part of the film’s review by News18 read, “When you’ve got an unhinged Ajith Kumar, ready to groove to Thottu Thottu Pesum Sulthana, and even willing to team up with John Wick and Don Lee, why burden the film with the melodrama of AK’s promises? This isn’t a story where emotional stakes matter, yet Adhik oddly lingers on sappy sequences that fall flat. Instead, he should have gone full throttle from the very beginning. We needed more of Baby Tyson, Jammy’s incredible playlist, Babel’s laughing gas, and Zakaba’s ghost. At its core, Good Bad Ugly is Ajith making a statement: he hasn’t forgotten his old ways, but is holding back his punches for his family—both literally and figuratively."
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