Ahan Shetty’s debut movie Tadap is being obtained effectively by the viewers. The Milan Luthria directorial had a powerful opening on the nox workplace. On its first day, Tadap earned Rs 4.05 crore, as per commerce analyst Taran Adarsh.
“#Tadap springs a BIGGG SURPRISE… 1656 screens, 50% occupancy in largest market [#Maharashtra], yet posts SOLID TOTAL on Day 1… Eclipses biz of all #Hindi films… Target audience – youth – contribute to energetic footfalls… All eyes on Day 2… Fri ₹ 4.05 cr. #India biz,” Adarsh tweeted.
#Tadap springs a BIGGG SURPRISE… 1656 screens, 50% occupancy in largest market [#Maharashtra], but posts SOLID TOTAL on Day 1… Eclipses biz of all #Hindi movies… Target viewers – youth – contribute to energetic footfalls… All eyes on Day 2… Fri ₹ 4.05 cr. #India biz. pic.twitter.com/G54ECQDoj0
— taran adarsh (@taran_adarsh) December 4, 2021
Ahan’s father Suniel Shetty, on Friday, shared a throwback photograph of the actor and penned an emotional word. In the word, Shetty requested Ahan to not take damaging feedback by coronary heart and take them as part of his studying. He additionally requested Ahan to not get “drunk on praise.”
“Your first Friday. Your first film release. Time for #Tadap is here & will also go by like every other day. Becoming just another milestone as the movies flash by. But remember one thing. People are true if you are. Don’t take it to heart if they critique you, it’s a learning. Don’t get too punch drunk on praise. It’s a perk. Just stay blessed, grounded, simple, honest, true & the People, the Public – the only followers that matter – will become your friends. All in all, be as sincere as you were for your first film. Make people love you. Love them back. Like I love you son,” Suniel Shetty wrote.
Tadap, which additionally stars Tara Sutaria, is Telugu movie RX100’s remake.
The Indian Express’ movie critic Shubhra Gupta gave the movie one star. “Local Mussoorie lad Ishana (Ahan Shetty) falls hard for London-returned fair maiden Ramisa (Tara Sutaria). But the path of true love is strewn with tiresome 80s cliches, bombastic dialogues and stereotyped characters, so what we get is same old same old. Many questions arise,” Gupta wrote in her evaluation.