
The ₹30 Crore Note: How AR Rahman's Record-Breaking Ramayana Deal—and His "Terrifying" Hans Zimmer Collaboration—Is Rewriting the Economics of Film Music in India
In the spring of 2026, as Nitesh Tiwari's Ramayana entered its final months of post-production ahead of a Diwali release that the entire Indian film industry is watching with a mixture of hope and anxiety, a single number began circulating through the trade that was, in its own way, as staggering as the film's ₹4,000 crore budget. The number was ₹30 crore. It was not a visual-effects line item or a star's fee. It was the amount that A.R. Rahman, the two-time Academy Award-winning composer, was reportedly charging to create the music for the most expensive film in Indian cinema history—plus a share of the profits








