The wait just got a whole lot shorter for Akhil Akkineni fans. Advance bookings for Lenin have finally gone live, and the early signs are exactly what the team would have hoped for. With the film hitting theatres on July 10, the excitement in Andhra Pradesh and Telangana feels different this time around – more grounded, more personal.
Akhil plays a rugged character named Lenin in this rural action drama set deep in the Rayalaseema region. It’s not your typical polished hero story. The film leans into family feuds, raw rivalries, and a romance that apparently cuts through all the chaos. Bhagyashri Borse plays the female lead Bharathi, and early buzz suggests their chemistry brings the much-needed emotional anchor to the mass elements. What’s interesting is how the makers have positioned this one.
After Agent didn’t quite land the way everyone expected, Lenin feels like a deliberate return to the kind of cinema that built Akhil’s initial connect with audiences – loud, local, and layered with heart. Director Murali Kishor Abburu and the writing team seem to have focused on that balance, and producer Nagarjuna Akkineni’s involvement has clearly added both emotional weight and industry muscle. The pre-release events over the last couple of days have only amplified things.
Nagarjuna turned up as chief guest and didn’t hold back, calling the film a special gift from his son. Akhil himself got emotional at one of the meets in Rajahmundry, thanking fans for sticking around through the delays. These aren’t just routine promotions – the turnout and the energy coming out of Tirupati and Aditya University suggest the core audience is genuinely invested again. Music by Thaman S is already doing its job.
The couple of tracks that have dropped carry that signature mass energy while still leaving room for melody, which should help the film travel beyond the core Telugu states. For audiences in the US, the film opens a day earlier with premieres lined up for July 9. Bookings are already live across several locations, and early interest from the diaspora looks solid.
Telugu cinema has been steadily building its overseas footprint, and Lenin appears to be arriving at the right moment. With just two days left for release, the advance booking momentum feels promising. It’s not just about opening day numbers anymore – it’s about whether the film can hold its ground in the days that follow, especially in single screens and smaller centres where Rayalaseema-set stories often find their strongest voice.
If you’ve been waiting for Akhil to deliver something that feels like a proper comeback vehicle, Lenin might just be it. The bookings are open. The theatres are ready. Now it’s up to the film to do the talking when the lights go down on July 10.
