The Bangalore Pawan Kalyan Fans Association landed in legal trouble after organising an unsanctioned stage and DJ celebration outside Sandhya Theatre ahead of the paid preview of the superstar’s film, They Call Him OG.
September 26, 2025: People were really excited about the release of Telugu actor Pawan Kalyan’s new movie, They Call Him OG. But a group of fans in Bengaluru sued the movie. The Madivala Police filed a report against the persons who threw the party for the Bangalore Pawan Kalyan Fans Association because it wasn’t allowed before the paid preview screening of the movie.
The event happened on Wednesday, the night before the movie came out in theaters all across the world on September 25, 2025. It was outside the Sandhya Theatre in Madiwala.
The Party That Didn’t Get Permission
The Bengaluru Police allege that the fan club built a massive stage and a DJ system for a party without asking the right persons first. They Call Him OG, which has been doing very well at the box office, was the reason for the meeting.
“We went right to the scene as soon as we found out,” a police officer told. “On Wednesday, we took the loudspeakers and told the organizers to take down the stage.”
After the intervention, the Madivala Police received permission from a city court to file a First Information Report (FIR) against the people who set it up. The police intervention shows how carefully the restrictions banning public meetings and celebrations are implemented, especially for huge movie events.
About the movie “They Call Him OG”
The movie itself has had a big effect; sources suggest it made more than ₹90 crore on its first day in India, breaking all records.
In the 1990s, when things were very bad, the action-crime thriller They Call Him OG takes place. Pawan Kalyan plays Ojas Gambheera, or OG, a once feared mafia boss who returns to the Mumbai underworld after being exiled to battle a new and dangerous kingpin named Omi Bhau, played by Emraan Hashmi. Sujeeth directed the movie, while DVV Danayya produced it. It is about retribution, power, and betrayal.
The case in Bengaluru is a reminder to fan groups who want to stage major public events about how crucial it is to secure authorization from the appropriate people.
