Sunny Deol and Akshaye Khanna Walk Into a Courtroom — But Can Star Nostalgia Survive a Script Critics Already See Through?

S Venkateshwari

Ikka pairs Sunny Deol and Akshaye Khanna in a courtroom face-off that delivers familiar star presence but, according to early reviews including Mid-day, suffers from a thin, predictable script. The nostalgia is real; the screenplay depth required to sustain a legal thriller in 2026 is not. Against entrenched competitors like Dhamaal 4 and Welcome 3, Ikka's box-office window looks perilously narrow.

Two men who once owned the marquee walk back into a Bollywood frame together, and the theatre hushes — not because the script demands it, but because muscle memory does. Sunny Deol, the man whose arm was a franchise. Akshaye Khanna, whose silences used to be louder than anyone else's dialogue. The pairing alone should have been enough. According to Mid-day's review, Ikka "grabs attention" on exactly this premise — and then quietly reveals it has nowhere interesting to take it.

That gap between the promise of the poster and the reality of the second act is, in 2026, no longer a minor inconvenience. It is a career verdict.

The Courtroom That Bollywood Built — and Flogged

Bollywood has never met a courtroom it could not turn into a monologue stage. From Damini to Pink to Jolly LLB, the genre works when the writing crackles — when the legal theatre is a pressure cooker, not a lecture hall. Ikka reportedly positions Deol and Khanna on opposite sides of a legal clash, and there is an undeniable charge in watching two actors of their vintage spar. But as Mid-day notes, the drama "lacks depth" — the very thing a courtroom thriller cannot survive without. Strip the genre to its skeleton and you are left with dialogue, logic, and escalation. If the screenplay does not deliver those three, no amount of baritone can fill the gap.

The trouble, industry watchers suggest, is that Ikka appears to have been reverse-engineered: start with two names that guarantee a first-day audience, then build a vehicle around them. That is a producer's instinct, not a writer's. And in a market where audiences have been trained by streaming-era legal dramas — shows like Criminal Justice and Scam 1992, where the writing is dense and every scene earns its runtime — the theatrical courtroom film has to work harder than ever to justify the ticket price.

Inside Talk

The whisper in trade circles, according to industry sources, is that Ikka was greenlit largely on the strength of the Deol-Khanna reunion hook — a genuine curiosity magnet after their earlier pairings. The assumption, the talk goes, was that nostalgia plus a proven genre equals a safe theatrical bet. But the early critical reception has reportedly rattled the distribution side. Speculation in film trade quarters suggests the opening-day numbers will tell the real story: if Ikka cannot convert that first-show curiosity into strong word-of-mouth by Saturday evening, the holdover power of Dhamaal 4 and Welcome 3 — both of which are still drawing families — could squeeze it off prime screens by its second Monday.

There is also quiet chatter about what this means for Sunny Deol's post-Gadar 2 trajectory. That 2023 blockbuster was supposed to be the launchpad for a sustained comeback. But in the years since, the projects that followed have not quite replicated its magic. Fans online are debating whether the issue is script selection or the industry's reluctance to write roles that demand more from Deol than physical presence and emotional volume. As one film journalist put it on social media, "the audience showed up for Tara Singh — they are still waiting for the next character worth showing up for."

(This reflects industry chatter and unverified speculation, not confirmed fact.)

The Box-Office Arithmetic That Does Not Lie

Here is the number that should keep Ikka's producers up at night: Welcome 3, according to trade reports, had already crossed ₹85 crore in its first two weeks, and Dhamaal 4 opened on approximately 3,500 screens despite mixed reviews of its own. Both films are franchise-driven, family-audience magnets — the exact demographic a courtroom drama has to steal from to survive. Ikka is not competing for a niche; it is fighting for the same Friday-night multiplex slot against two films that have already built momentum.

India Herald's read of the real structural problem is this: the courtroom genre in Bollywood has quietly migrated to OTT, where longer runtimes allow the slow-burn tension that legal stories demand. A two-hour theatrical film has to compress all that tension into a tighter frame — and if the writing is not razor-sharp, the compression exposes every weakness. Ikka, by the early critical accounts, appears to have exactly this problem: scenes that would breathe on a streaming platform but feel rushed or underdeveloped on the big screen.

What This Really Tells Us About Late-Career Star Vehicles

The deeper question Ikka forces is one Bollywood has been dodging since at least 2019: can star nostalgia, by itself, open a film anymore? The evidence is increasingly unkind. Audiences will show up for the first show — they did for Gadar 2, they did for Pathaan, they did for Animal. But the common thread in every post-pandemic hit is not the star; it is the EVENT quality of the film itself. Gadar 2 worked because it was a cultural moment, not merely a Sunny Deol movie. Pathaan worked because SRK's return was wrapped in spectacle and genuine screenplay momentum.

Ikka, by contrast, appears to offer the stars without the event. And in a market where a viewer can wait three months and watch the same film on a streaming platform from their couch, "familiar faces in a familiar genre" is no longer a compelling theatrical proposition. The stars are the door; the script is the room. If the room is empty, the door does not matter.

The next week will be definitive. If Ikka holds above the ₹5-crore daily mark through its first weekend, there is a fighting chance — word-of-mouth can still rescue a film that audiences enjoy more than critics did. But if the Monday drop is steep, expect screens to be reallocated to the safer bets already running. For Deol and Khanna both, the uncomfortable truth may be that the courtroom they walked into was always going to deliver a verdict — just not the one they were hoping for.

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Key Takeaways

  • Ikka grabs attention on the Sunny Deol-Akshaye Khanna reunion but, per Mid-day's review, lacks the script depth a courtroom thriller requires to sustain.
  • The film enters a crowded box-office window against Welcome 3 (₹85 crore+ in two weeks) and Dhamaal 4 (3,500-screen opening), fighting for the same family-audience screens.
  • Bollywood's courtroom genre has quietly migrated to OTT where slow-burn tension thrives — a two-hour theatrical film without razor-sharp writing exposes every weakness.
  • The deeper industry signal: post-pandemic audiences will show up for star nostalgia on Day 1, but only a genuinely event-quality script converts curiosity into sustained box-office legs.
  • Ikka's first-weekend trajectory — specifically whether it holds above ₹5 crore daily through Sunday — will determine whether it survives the second-week screen squeeze.

By the Numbers

  • Welcome 3 crossed ₹85 crore in its first two weeks, per trade reports, directly competing for Ikka's target audience.
  • Dhamaal 4 opened on approximately 3,500 screens despite mixed reviews, establishing a screen-count moat that Ikka must breach.

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