The Real Reason Behind Akhanda 2 Missed Its Release Day!

Akhanda 2 did not get postponed because of any issue with the movie. The real problem comes from an old financial dispute linked to Aagadu, 1 Nenokkadine. A decade-old payment issue between Eros International and 14 Reels Entertainment has now unexpectedly pulled Akhanda 2 into a legal block.

In 2015, Eros and 14 Reels Entertainment entered into an agreement related to Aagadu, 1 Nenokkadine times. Payments, documents and other commitments under that deal soon turned into a dispute. The matter went to arbitration. In 2019, the tribunal ordered 14 Reels to pay more than Rs 11 Cr with interest, hand over all title documents, and avoid dealing with those movies or any new films falling under that agreement until the dues were cleared. The award was upheld by the Madras High Court, the Division Bench and finally the Supreme Court in 2021. But no payment was made.

For almost four years nothing happened. Eros did not try to enforce the award or recover the money. The case stayed silent until 2025.

Everything changed when Eros learnt that Akhanda 2 was being prepared for release. The project was handled not by 14 Reels Entertainment, but by another connected company, 14 Reels Plus LLP. Eros argued that both entities were controlled by the same people and that shifting the film to the LLP was a plan to avoid paying the earlier dues. A legal notice was issued in August 2025, and Eros approached the Madras High Court seeking to stop Akhanda 2 until their award money was secured.

In court, Eros said that the LLP was just an extension of the old company and that the release would block recovery of the pending dues. The respondents argued that Eros avoided enforcement for four years and that the LLP was an independent company with no link to the arbitration.

A single judge of the High Court first dismissed Eros’ petitions. The judge said Section 9 could not be used as a substitute for recovery proceedings and that Eros delayed too long. According to this order, Akhanda 2 was free to release.

But on appeal, the Division Bench took an opposite stand. The judges set aside the earlier order and sent the matter back for a detailed hearing. Until then, Akhanda 2 cannot be released or distributed in any form unless the full amount of the arbitral award is paid. With this, the release of the film has been completely halted.

The entire dispute is about old films, not about Akhanda 2. But the new film has been caught in the crossfire because its revenue is seen as a way to recover the old dues. A decade-old debt has now stopped a major new theatrical release, showing how long standing financial issues in the film industry can suddenly come back and disrupt even the biggest projects.

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