The Devil Wears Prada 2 is one of Hollywood’s biggest success stories in 2026. In the first weekend itself, the film amassed a whopping collection of $233.6 million worldwide. Currently, almost a month after its release, it has maintained a strong hold at the global box office and has accrued somewhere around $600 million. The numbers are still growing globally.
However, the film has failed to sustain the same momentum at the Indian box office. So far the film has attracted only urban audiences and collected around Rs 30 crore which is roughly $3.12 Million. It is nowhere near the collection in Hollywood and other Western nations.
This gap points to an unsolved pop-culture mystery: why did a global pop-culture topic remain a selective urban success in India?
There are several ways to look at it. Let us look at them sequentially. The Devil Wears Prada 2 was riding high on the success of the original film. The cast reprised their roles as Meryl Streep stepped into the shoes of Miranda Priestly, Anne Hathaway was seen as Andy Sachs, Emily Blunt as Emily Charlton and Stanley Tucci as Nigel.

In the US, Europe and several other English-speaking territories it became a cult film. The fast-paced work culture along with its sharp humor gave it a unique edge. It evoked feelings of pure nostalgia and a memory of the bygone fashion era.
For many people in these cultures, the sequel was a chance to revisit the places, feelings and the older times that are now cherished memories. So it was a mix of the emotional pull and mass-market nostalgia.
In India, the film mostly attracted the urban and English-speaking population. Film and mass-media students, journalists, and critics were a subset of Indian audiences who watched the film. The emotional pull was relatively less and the film did not evoke strong sentiments that could cut across classes.
Given that fashion, especially branded fashion, has historically been aspirational in India, only in recent years have value-fashion chains like Zudio and Trends made trendy clothing more accessible across cities and smaller markets. Premium fashion brands like Prada, Gucci, and Burberry are akin to gibberish in rural hinterlands of India.
So, I would say the audience that related to the original film were the ones who went to watch the sequel. For this kind of film to travel beyond metros, the cultural familiarity around fashion, luxury workplaces and magazine culture has to be much wider. For many, this is the kind of film that feels perfect for OTT viewing. Especially if the audience is not already emotionally attached to the original.
Next, we look at the Indian film trends, in terms of what works when it comes to Bollywood and Hollywood. In India, action dramas with strong emotional stakes and some violence often work well theatrically. In fact, these films act as a reliable formula for actors trying to recover from flops.
Hollywood films that break out widely in India usually belong to event-friendly categories: superheroes, action spectacles, horror franchises, animation, fantasy or visually large-scale adventures. So I’d say the genre of The Devil Wears Prada 2 shaped its Indian box-office ceiling. It is a comedy-drama set in the fashion world. Therefore, it attracts a niche audience and not the mass audience.
Marketing and screen priorities matter too. In India, Hollywood films compete not only with other English releases but also with Hindi, Tamil, Telugu, Malayalam and regional films. Unless a Hollywood title arrives as a massive theatrical event, its reach can remain limited to metro cities and premium screens. The Devil Wears Prada 2 had curiosity, but not the urgency of an Avengers-style release.
So, the India-versus-world discrepancy is not really a failure story. It is a market-fit story. Globally, the sequel benefited from deep nostalgia, enthusiasm in female audiences and the return of an iconic cast. In India, those same strengths worked, but within a narrower audience base.
The film did not underperform because Indian viewers disliked it. It simply belonged to a category that India embraced more selectively: stylish, English-language, urban, nostalgia-driven cinema.
That is why The Devil Wears Prada 2 can be both a worldwide blockbuster and a modest Indian grosser at the same time. Its global success proves the power of nostalgia. Its Indian numbers show that nostalgia needs local depth to become a true mass-market event.
If you are still deciding to watch the film, read the review here.