Filmyzilla Chandni Chowk To China Page
Within 12 hours, the link had been downloaded 500,000 times.
On the night of January 14, 2009—just hours before the film’s official release—one of Bittu’s men in a Delhi PVR managed to record the first half of Chandni Chowk to China using a Sony Handycam hidden inside a popcorn bucket. The footage was shaky. You could hear people coughing and a child asking for a bathroom break. But it was watchable .
Bittu ran a small, nameless piracy operation—what would later be known as . His setup was modest: a high-speed broadband connection, three external hard drives, a cracked copy of DVD ripping software, and a network of paid ushers who slipped into cinema halls with concealed cameras. filmyzilla chandni chowk to china
By 3 a.m., Bittu had compressed the file to under 700MB and uploaded it to a free file-hosting site. He then posted a single link on a Telegram precursor—an invite-only Desi torrent forum. The title read: “Chandni Chowk to China – Full Print – Filmyzilla Exclusive – First on Net.”
In the winter of 2009, Bollywood was buzzing. Chandni Chowk to China —a wild mashup of martial arts, slapstick comedy, and Indian melodrama—was set to be the year’s first big spectacle. Warner Bros had poured crores into the production. Akshay Kumar had trained for months with Chinese stunt coordinators. Deepika Padukone had learned sword-fighting. The team hoped for a Diwali-level opening in January. Within 12 hours, the link had been downloaded 500,000 times
Bittu eventually resurfaced under a new domain—Filmyzilla.biz—and continued leaking films for another decade. Chandni Chowk to China became a cult classic over time, but its box office never recovered. Akshay Kumar later joked in an interview, “The only thing that travelled faster than my character to China was the pirated print of my film.”
And somewhere in the digital back alleys of the internet, Filmyzilla kept running—fueled by cheap data, hungry viewers, and the brutal math of a country where a movie ticket costs more than a day’s meal. You could hear people coughing and a child
Here’s a short story covering the controversial connection between the piracy website and the Bollywood film Chandni Chowk to China (2009), starring Akshay Kumar and Deepika Padukone. Title: The Leak That Traveled Faster Than a Monk’s Kick