After RRR took Ram Charan’s face to every corner of the world — a film that won an Oscar, grossed ₹1,200 crore, and made him a name in Hollywood conversations — the question his fans have been asking for over a year is: what comes next?
The answer is Peddi. And it is nothing like what you might expect.
No pan-India mythology. No period epic with a thousand extras and a battle that lasts forty minutes. No sleek modern avatar. Instead: the 1980s. An Andhra Pradesh village. Red dust. Cricket bats worn smooth by use. Wrestling in the earth. A man named Peddi Pehelwan who uses sport — not as entertainment, but as a weapon of community survival — to hold together a village that power and politics are trying to tear apart.
The Peddi trailer was officially released via a special event held in Mumbai on May 18, 2026. Producer Naga Vamsi compared Ram Charan’s intensity in the trailer to Virat Kohli. The trailer shows Ram Charan’s rustic action avatar filled with wrestling, cricket, and emotional village drama. In North America alone, the film had already sold 10,000 tickets for premiere shows — nearly three weeks before release.
This is the complete guide to Peddi — everything confirmed, everything explained, and why this film might be the one that proves Ram Charan is not just a global star but a generational South Indian actor in the tradition that stretches from NTR Sr. to Chiranjeevi to Prabhas.
Quick Facts: Peddi at a Glance
🏆 Peddi — Official Film Details
| Title | Peddi (also referred to as RC16) |
| Release Date | June 4, 2026 (worldwide) | June 3 premieres (North America) |
| Director | Buchi Babu Sana (Uppena) |
| Music | A.R. Rahman |
| Cinematography | R. Rathnavelu ISC |
| Producers | Mythri Movie Makers, Vriddhi Cinemas, IVY Entertainment, Sukumar Writings |
| International distributor | Hombale Films (KGF, Kantara distributors) |
| Languages | Telugu, Hindi, Tamil, Kannada, Malayalam (pan-India) |
| Genre | Rural Sports Action Drama |
| Setting | 1980s Andhra Pradesh |
| OTT after theatrical | JioHotstar (8 weeks post-release) |
| Trailer dropped | May 18, 2026 — Mumbai launch event + T-Series YouTube |
The Story: Cricket, Wrestling, and a Village That Refuses to Break
At the heart of Peddi is a deceptively simple premise that becomes, in the trailer and in the film’s promotional materials, something considerably more resonant than a standard sports drama.
Peddi Pehelwan is a villager in 1980s rural Andhra Pradesh. He is a successful wrestler who uses sports — especially wrestling and cricket — to reunite his villagers. The community he is trying to hold together is fractured by local politics and the specific power dynamics of the era — landlords, local strongmen, the particular cruelty of a system where the people with the least resources are pitted against each other by people who benefit from that division.
Peddi’s response to this is not political organising or violent resistance in the conventional sense. It is sport. He uses sport as a form of collective identity — the thing that makes a group of people, who have been told they have nothing in common and nothing to fight for, discover that they do.
The film’s structure contains one of its most intriguing creative choices:
🏏 First Half: Cricket as Community Resistance
The film begins with cricket — the bat and ball, the village ground, the sport that by the 1980s had become India’s most powerful collective language. Cricket, in Peddi’s hands, is a way for the village to face an external threat as a single unit. The sport creates solidarity where division has been sown.
🤼 Second Half: Wrestling as Personal War
The second half sees Peddi transition into traditional wrestling — the akhara, the pit, the bone-and-muscle confrontation that is nothing like cricket’s collaborative strategy. As the teaser voiceover says: “Wrestling isn’t like cricket… it’s a game where you face death itself.” The shift from team sport to individual combat mirrors Peddi’s own journey — from community defender to a man whose battle has become personal, physical, and existential.
This dual-sport structure — cricket giving way to wrestling, community story becoming personal story — is one of the most interesting creative architectures in a recent Indian sports film. It suggests a film that is using genre conventions rather than simply fulfilling them.
The Cast: Everyone Confirmed
For Peddi, Ram Charan underwent significant physical transformation — training in wrestling and cricket for months. It is no secret that Ram Charan trained his body in various aspects of wrestling action and sports for Peddi. The trailer reveals a Ram Charan who is physically present in a way that his recent cleaner-image roles did not require — heavier, rougher, with the specific physicality of someone who has genuinely built a body for a specific kind of movement.
Buchi Babu Sana: The Director Who Made Uppena
To understand what Peddi might be at its best, you need to understand what Uppena was.
Uppena (2021), Buchi Babu Sana’s debut film, was a Telugu romantic drama released during COVID — a film that, despite arriving in the middle of a global pandemic with dramatically reduced theatrical capacity, went on to become a quiet phenomenon. Panja Vaisshnav Tej and Krithi Shetty in a forbidden love story set against the sea, with Vijay Sethupathi as a terrifying father figure. The film was beautiful, emotionally earned, and demonstrated in Buchi Babu Sana a filmmaker with a specific gift: making you care about characters before he puts them in danger.
That gift — the patience to build people before testing them — is exactly what a sports drama set in a politically fractured rural community needs. Peddi is not primarily a sports film. It is a film about a community, told through the lens of sport. Buchi Babu Sana’s emotional intelligence, which made Uppena work, is the most important creative asset this production has.
A.R. Rahman’s Score: What the Music Means for This Film
A.R. Rahman composing for a rural 1980s South Indian sports drama is a combination that has the potential to produce something genuinely extraordinary. Rahman’s gift for music that is simultaneously rooted in Indian classical and folk traditions and capable of reaching emotionally beyond language and region makes him the ideal composer for a film that is trying to be both specifically Telugu and pan-Indian simultaneously.
The final song sequence featuring Ram Charan and Shruti Haasan was being filmed on April 29, 2026, in Hyderabad — described as composed by A.R. Rahman and featuring a surprise element, marking the conclusion of the production phase.
Rahman’s last major Telugu association was with Mani Ratnam’s Ponniyin Selvan series — his score for those films was widely considered among the finest work of his later career. His involvement in Peddi, combined with the rural 1980s setting, suggests a score that will draw from folk melodies, traditional percussion, and the specific sonic textures of Andhra Pradesh in that era.
The Release Date Journey: From March to June
The film was originally supposed to be released on March 27, 2026, on the occasion of Ram Charan’s birthday. But the makers had to push the date back because some production work was not completed. It was then pushed to April 30, 2026, then to June 25, before the makers finalized the current date of June 4, 2026.
The multiple postponements — while frustrating for fans — actually generated a specific kind of sustained anticipation that straight-to-date releases rarely achieve. Each announcement kept Peddi in the conversation. Each delay prompted renewed discussion of the trailer, the cast, the songs. By the time June 4 was locked, the film had been discussed in entertainment circles for months longer than it would have been with a clean March release.
Hombale Films — the production house behind KGF and Kantara — has come on board to distribute the film in international markets, including North America, the UK, Australia, and the Gulf region. That distribution partnership is significant: Hombale built the international Telugu/Kannada audience for KGF from scratch. Their involvement signals that Peddi’s international commercial ambitions are serious.
The Hype: Why This Film Matters
🔥 Ram Charan After RRR: The Expectations
After RRR‘s global impact — the Oscar for Naatu Naatu, the Golden Globe, the worldwide theatrical success — Ram Charan’s next film carries a specific kind of weight. Audiences who discovered him through RRR expect something at least as ambitious. Peddi is ambitious in a completely different direction: not the mythological spectacle of RRR, but the intimate emotional scale of Rangasthalam. Both are ambitious. The second kind is harder to achieve.
🔥 Buchi Babu Sana’s Second Film
The pressure on a director’s second film — particularly after a critically beloved debut — is one of the more interesting recurring stories in South Indian cinema. Uppena was a phenomenon. Peddi is the test of whether Buchi Babu Sana was a one-film wonder or the real thing. Every available sign — the scale of the production, the quality of the cast assembled around him, the trailer’s emotional register — points toward the second.
🔥 Sports Drama as a Genre Vehicle
Indian sports dramas, at their best, are among the most reliable emotional experiences in cinema. Lagaan. Dangal. 83. Sarpatta Parambarai. The genre’s power lies in its combination of genuine physical stakes — bodies in motion, outcomes uncertain — with character journeys that are compressed and clarified by the sport’s structure. Peddi, with its dual-sport architecture and 1980s rural setting, has the ingredients for a sports drama that transcends genre conventions entirely.
🔥 The North American Numbers
10,000 tickets sold in North America for premiere shows, nearly three weeks before release. For a Telugu film releasing in the diaspora market, this is a significant pre-sale figure — comparable to the strongest performing Telugu films in that region. It suggests that post-RRR Ram Charan’s international audience has genuine depth, not just casual interest.
Box Office Expectations: What Does Success Look Like?
| Scenario | India Gross | What It Means |
|---|---|---|
| Minimum success | ₹80–100 crore | Decent but below expectations given the scale |
| Solid hit | ₹150–200 crore | Confirms Ram Charan’s solo-star drawing power post-RRR |
| Blockbuster | ₹250+ crore | Rangasthalam-level — career landmark, Buchi Babu Sana confirmed as major director |
| All-time great | ₹400+ crore | Pan-India phenomenon — Ram Charan established as solo top-tier in Hindi market too |
Our projection: ₹150–200 crore worldwide if the content delivers. The pre-release buzz is strong. The trailer landed well. A.R. Rahman’s music will provide consistent airplay momentum. Hombale’s international distribution will maximise overseas numbers. The June 4 window, while competitive with Cocktail 2 (June 19), is well-placed for a pan-India Telugu film.
Koimoi — Peddi: Cast Details, Plot, Release Date & Everything We Know
NewsX — Peddi Trailer Out: Release Date, Cast & Plot Revealed
Sacnilk — Peddi Trailer, Musical Launch and Runtime Details
Sunday Guardian — Peddi Trailer: Date, Languages, Cast, Plot & What to Expect
Alt Bollywood — Peddi Release Date, Cast and Everything We Know
FlickOnClick — Peddi Movie Release Date Revealed
Filmibeat — Peddi: Complete Movie Page
FAQ — Quick Answers
🏆 Popcorn Review’s Assessment: Book June 4
Peddi has every ingredient of a genuinely great South Indian sports epic. A director who demonstrated emotional intelligence in his debut. A star who has earned the right to be trusted with material this serious. A composer who can make rural folk and modern emotion speak to each other across the same score. A dual-sport structure that suggests narrative ambition rather than genre complacency. And a setting — 1980s Andhra Pradesh — that gives the whole enterprise the specific texture of a real time and a real place rather than the generic “village India” that lesser productions settle for.
The trailers confirm what the cast and crew promised: Ram Charan as Peddi Pehelwan is a performance arriving from somewhere genuine. The comparison to Rangasthalam is the right comparison — not because the films are the same, but because both represent what Ram Charan looks like when he is making something personal rather than something commercial.
June 4, 2026. If the content delivers on the trailer’s promise: this is one of the year’s most important South Indian films. The advance bookings suggest the audience believes it already.
Are you watching Peddi on June 4 — and do you think Ram Charan can match his Rangasthalam with this one? Drop your prediction in the comments! 🏏🤼👇

Popcorn in hand and a opinion ready — Emily covers movie reviews, box office buzz, and all things cinema at Popcorn Review.

