Sriram Raghavan's Merry Christmas, starring Katrina Kaif and Vijay Sethupathi, which had a good box office start, earned Rs 3.45 Crore on its second day as per a report by Sacnilk.com. The film, which had earned Rs 2.45 crore on the day of its released, witnessed a jump on Saturday. The total collection of the film at the domestic box office now stands at Rs 5.9 crores. For the film's day 1 at the box office, Tarn Adarsh wrote in a tweet, "Merry Christmas opens similar to Sriram Raghavan's last release AndhaDhun [₹ 2.70 cr]... Dependent on word of mouth to take it forward, Merry Christmas witnessed substantial growth towards evening shows on Day 1... Fri ₹ 2.30 cr." He added, "An upward trend on Sat and Sun is definitely on the cards... In fact, Sat morning shows have opened better than Fri."
Take a look at the tweet below:
After Merry Christmas released, Vicky Kaushal wrote an appreciation post for wife Katrina Kaif. He wrote, "Merry Christmas everyone! So freaking proud of you love for how beautifully you have surrendered yourself to Sriram Sir's masterful storytelling and to the complexities of 'Maria'...Her rawness, her mystery, her magic... All done with such honesty and nuance! And that dance... uff! This one's truly your best work till date." About Vijay Sethupathi's performance in the film, Vicky Kaushal wrote in his note, "Vijay Sethupati Sir... don't know how you bring that childlike innocence in your characters but it's pure joy to watch you bring Albert alive."
He continued, "How you guys are going to make people jingle all the way when they watch the Film... especially that end! Go enjoy this thrilling fun ride in theatres near you! Merry Christmas in cinemas now," read an excerpt from Vicky Kaushal's post. Take a look:
Meanwhile, in his review for NDTV, film critic Saibal Chatterjee wrote, "Merry Christmas is a delightfully inventive cinematic ride that employs a very 1980s Hindi cinema soundscape and an evocative and transportive colour palette to generate a sense of bewilderment as the spectre of loneliness and the repercussions of lost love - both Maria and Albert have back stories that have brought them where they are at the outset of the film before the duo travels through the film's two-and-a-half-hour runtime in quest of a semblance of deliverance."