Big Bollywood Drama: A Star vs. a Studio Clash
India, MumbaiWed Jun 03 2026
A famous actor left a big film in December 2025, sparking one of the biggest disputes in Indian cinema. The fight involves a popular production company and about 25 top industry leaders, leading to an audit by a major accounting firm and a directive from a workers’ federation.
The core of the disagreement is a claimed damage bill of roughly 45 crore rupees (about $4. 7 million). The dispute centers on why a project announced in August 2023 fell apart just weeks before filming was set to begin.
The timeline shows the production company released a first look in April 2023 and made it public in August. The formal agreement, however, was signed over a year later, on August 7, 2024. The actor’s role had been announced earlier, but the final contract lagged behind the public hype.
The franchise dates back to 1978, with a reboot in 2006 and another sequel in 2011. The latest project was meant to be a major hit, but the actor’s exit in December 2025 changed everything.
During the months before leaving, the actor trained for action scenes and attended costume trials, but cancelled several rehearsal dates. He also had a successful film that same month, which earned over 500 crore rupees domestically.
After the exit, a series of private meetings were held. The first round involved many senior stars and producers but the actor did not attend. Later, a joint session included both sides and was attended by well-known actors and filmmakers.
The actor’s main complaints were: the script never met his standards, the director was unavailable for long periods, his fee was lowered, and the budget was cut from an initial 300–350 crore to about 150 crore. He also said he had not received any advance payment.
The producers countered with chat logs showing the actor’s enthusiasm for the script drafts and claimed no formal fee changes were made after signing. They also disputed the budget cut claim, arguing it was part of pre‑contract negotiations.
An independent audit found that the production company spent about 45 crore on overseas scouting, script changes, crew adjustments and contracts for over 200 workers. The actor’s settlement offer of 10 crore plus a future discount was rejected by the producers, who wanted straight cash for losses.
Communication broke down after that. The actor left for the U. S. , and attempts to contact him went unanswered. A trade federation issued a non‑cooperation directive, telling its members not to work on projects involving the actor until the dispute was resolved.
A senior producer filed a court petition challenging the federation’s authority, citing a 2017 ruling that such bodies cannot impose bans. The actor’s own association expressed support but said it had not been consulted and could have helped mediate.
Neither side has publicly commented further, and the dispute remains unresolved. Industry insiders see this case as a warning that producers must honour commitments, and that the industry needs clearer rules to protect both stars and production houses.
https://localnews.ai/article/big-bollywood-drama-a-star-vs-a-studio-clash-bbe42457
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