Raazi Box Office Collection: Alia Bhatt and Vicky Kaushal's film is unstoppable at domestic market

Alia Bhatt stars as an Indian spy in Meghna Gulzar's Raazi. The movie, which also stars Vicky Kaushal as a Pakistani army official is based on Harinder Sikka's novel, Calling Sehmat and released on May 11.

Updated on May 22, 2018  |  03:44 PM IST |  3.4M

Alia Bhatt stars as an Indian spy in Meghna Gulzar's Raazi. The movie, which also stars Vicky Kaushal as a Pakistani army official is based on Harinder Sikka's novel, Calling Sehmat and released on May 11.

The film is doing extremely well at the box office. Raazi has earned Rs 78.33 crore till now and the buzz around the movie doesn't seem to die down. Recently, the team celebrated the success of the film with the media. And now, Alia took to her Instagram to express her gratitude for all the love her film has received. 

She posted a monochrome picture of herself clicked during the making of the film and captioned it, "A moment during the making of Raazi. Words can’t do justice for the gratitude we feel for all the love you’ve given our little film! Raazi is a week old & lifetime proud, but for us it’ll always be our little baby." 

What did you think of Raazi? Let us know in the comments below.

Meanwhile, speaking of Raazi, Alia revealed to Filmfare about how it was emotionally exhausting shooting for the movie. Alia said, "It was exhausting. But that's also why I chose it. There were days when I'd be thinking, 'Oh my god! Aj yeh scenes hai'! I had to build up strength and emotion. That feeling is scary. But it's also addictive. When you move past that feeling, you give your best. Whether it was during Udta Punjab, Dear Zindagi or Raazi. Coming back to the earlier question, I don't know if I identified with the girl. She's an extremely brave girl. I'm not saying I'm not brave. But I'm not that brave. I can't just drop everything."

"I was going through a unique time when I started shooting for Raazi. It was a new lonesome period. I had begun to enjoy my solitude. I kind of detached myself from the world. So much that I would leave my phone behind in my van. The film gave me a lot of silence and time with myself, which helped me grow," Alia added.

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