Close Menu
    What's Hot

    Weve lasted longer than Lennon and McCartney as people who have written together. Probably the only way were ahead of them: Sex, infidelity and boozing – how Squeezes Glenn Tilbrook and Chris Difford became new waves greatest songwriting team

    May 30, 2026

    Slam Dunk North 2026 – Festival Review

    May 30, 2026

    ALBUM SALES (week 22, 2026): Drake, Drake, Drake, Don Toliver & more!

    May 29, 2026
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    smashhitsmusicmagazine.com
    • Home
    • ALTERNATIVE
    • R&B
    • HIP HOP
    • METAL
    • POP
    • ROCK
    • COUNTRY
    • MOVIES
    • CONTACT
      • LEGAL STUFF
    smashhitsmusicmagazine.com
    Home»MOVIES»Ramayana Targets the Global Blockbuster Stage
    MOVIES

    Ramayana Targets the Global Blockbuster Stage

    AdminBy AdminApril 15, 2026
    Share Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn
    Ramayana Targets the Global Blockbuster Stage
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest


    Some films are sold as releases. Ramayana is being sold as an event.

    The latest push around the project has put Ranbir Kapoor’s Rama front and centre, giving the film a sharper public face at exactly the right moment. But the bigger story is not just the reveal of its central figure. It is the scale of the ambition behind the film itself.

    Ramayana is being built as a two-part live-action epic with global reach in mind. That matters. This is not being framed like a local blockbuster that might travel later. It is being positioned from the start as large-format, international event cinema.

    Ramayana (2026), starring Ranbir Kapoor, Sai Pallavi / Prime Focus Studios via FilmDB.co.uk
    Ramayana (2026), starring Ranbir Kapoor, Sai Pallavi / Prime Focus Studios via FilmDB.co.uk

    According to the film’s official rollout, Ramayana is being filmed for IMAX, with Part 1 due in 2026 and Part 2 following in 2027. The production is directed by Nitesh Tiwari and produced by Prime Focus Studios in association with DNEG and Yash’s Monster Mind Creations. The cast includes Ranbir Kapoor as Rama, Yash as Ravana, Sai Pallavi as Sita, Sunny Deol as Hanuman and Ravie Dubey as Lakshmana.

    That is a serious package on its own. Add in the fact that Hans Zimmer and A.R. Rahman are collaborating on the music, and it becomes even clearer what kind of film this wants to be. The message is obvious: Ramayana is not aiming to feel merely big by Indian standards. It is aiming to look and sound like a film that belongs in the global blockbuster conversation.

    The current campaign also feels sharper than a standard mythological launch. The official first look at Ramayana did more than offer a fresh reveal. It pushed the project further into the public eye as a prestige-scale cinematic proposition, one designed to carry visual spectacle, mythic weight and broad crossover potential in the same frame.

    Why does Ramayana feel bigger than a standard film launch?

    Because the pitch here is not just spectacle. It is scale with cultural weight.

    For many viewers outside India, Ramayana may become a first major screen encounter with one of the most enduring stories in Indian tradition. That gives the film a different kind of pressure. It does not simply need to open well. It needs to connect across borders without flattening what makes the story powerful in the first place.

    Ramayana (2026), starring Ranbir Kapoor, Sai Pallavi / Prime Focus Studios via FilmDB.co.uk
    Ramayana (2026), starring Ranbir Kapoor, Sai Pallavi / Prime Focus Studios via FilmDB.co.uk

    That ambition is also visible in how the film is being introduced to the wider industry, with global tentpole event positioning at CinemaCon 2026. That matters because it shows the film is not only being marketed to fans of Indian cinema, but also being placed into a much wider theatrical conversation.

    That is the real challenge with a film like this. Big budgets can buy attention. Star casting can buy headlines. But neither guarantees that a culturally rooted epic will land with audiences around the world. To do that, Ramayana has to make its themes feel immediate: duty, sacrifice, righteousness and the cost of doing what is right.

    Right now, Ramayana feels bigger than a routine campaign because it is trying to do more than launch a film. It is trying to prove that a deeply rooted Indian epic can be presented with the scale, confidence and cinematic force of a true worldwide event.

    If it pulls that off, this will not just be remembered as another heavily marketed release.

    It will be remembered as a serious moment for global cinema.

    Ramayana poster

    Data sources: FilmDB.co.uk and TMDb. Availability of information may vary, and accuracy is not guaranteed.

    View Original Article Here

    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn
    Previous ArticleTheres no surprise tour announcement – this Saturday is it: Trent Reznor gives Nine Inch Noize update
    Next Article Sotto James releases the tender new track, Cold Fingers

    Related Posts

    Blazing Minds

    May 29, 2026

    Exclusive Southend Film Festival Interview with Natalie Scarsbrook

    May 29, 2026

    Could Obsession Become One of the Most Profitable Horror Movies Ever?

    May 26, 2026

    Supergirl – James Gunns DCU Faces Its First Real Test in Summer 2026

    May 25, 2026
    LATEST POSTS

    Weve lasted longer than Lennon and McCartney as people who have written together. Probably the only way were ahead of them: Sex, infidelity and boozing – how Squeezes Glenn Tilbrook and Chris Difford became new waves greatest songwriting team

    May 30, 2026

    Slam Dunk North 2026 – Festival Review

    May 30, 2026

    ALBUM SALES (week 22, 2026): Drake, Drake, Drake, Don Toliver & more!

    May 29, 2026

    The Moshville Times – Shinedown release eighth studio album EI8HT and premiere music video for Young Again

    May 29, 2026

    Hear Employed To Serve get extra vicious on new single Dead Reckoning

    May 29, 2026

    Blazing Minds

    May 29, 2026

    City Splash 2026 (25.05.26)

    May 29, 2026
    Archives
    Our Picks

    Weve lasted longer than Lennon and McCartney as people who have written together. Probably the only way were ahead of them: Sex, infidelity and boozing – how Squeezes Glenn Tilbrook and Chris Difford became new waves greatest songwriting team

    May 30, 2026

    Slam Dunk North 2026 – Festival Review

    May 30, 2026

    ALBUM SALES (week 22, 2026): Drake, Drake, Drake, Don Toliver & more!

    May 29, 2026
    About Us

    Welcome to Smash Hits Music Magazine — the home of everything music. Whether you live for the rush of a new album drop, the thrill of breaking artist news, or the deep stories behind your favourite songs, you've found your people. We cover every corner of the music world, from mainstream chart-toppers to underground gems, hip-hop to heavy metal, pop to classical and everything in between.

    Our passionate team of writers brings you the latest news, reviews, interviews, and industry insights — fresh every day. Pull up a seat, turn up the volume, and let's talk music. You belong here.

    © 2026 Smash Hits Music Magazine. All rights reserved. All articles, images, product names, logos, and brands are property of their respective owners. All company, product and service names used in this website are for identification purposes only. Use of these names, logos, and brands does not imply endorsement unless specified. By using this site, you agree to the Terms & Conditions and Privacy Policy.

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.

    We use cookies to ensure that we give you the best experience on our website. If you continue to use this site we will assume that you are happy with it.