advertisement
“If someone wishes to wield a pair of scissors, it cannot be done without the concurrence of a film’s author, namely its director and producer. No one can just order ‘Cut this, cut that’,” says Shyam Benegal, who piloted a reform-seeking committee report on the contentious subject of film censorship, last year.
In the wake of the 14 cuts demanded of Madhur Bhandarkar’s upcoming film, Indu Sarkar, set against the backdrop of the Emergency rule of 1975-77, in an exclusive interview to The Quint, Benegal has expressed his ire and helplessness over the fact that the Information and Broadcasting Ministry has virtually ignored the suggestions recommended by the committee.
The cuts demanded of Indu Sarkar include:
Of late, An Insignificant Man a documentary on Arvind Kejriwal by Khushboo Ranka and Vinay Shukla, and “the lady-oriented” Lipstick Under My Burkha have faced censorship flak. Meanwhile, it is also being conjectured that under-production films with a political agenda - notably a purported biopic on the former Prime Minister Manmohan Singh - would require an okay from the real-life personalities depicted.
Bring up the point that the politically-motivated film, Kissa Kursi Ka during the Congress rule, had been destroyed (it was reshot later), and Benegal states ruefully:
The allusion is obviously to the ongoing arbitrary nature of the censor board, which, under the chairmanship of Pahlaj Nihalani seems to provoke a controversy a day.
The 82-year-old Shyam Benegal has often been the filmmaker-to-go-to for reform committees. With his customary cool, he says:
So why head committees at all, sir? To that Benegal laughs gamely, “Because I’m incorrigible perhaps. I live on hope. Maybe things will change some day for the better. Till then vis-à-vis the highest power committees, the government will accept what works for it with alacrity. The rest is omitted without so much as a by-your-leave.”
(The writer is a film critic, filmmaker, theatre director and a weekend painter.)
(We all love to express ourselves, but how often do we do it in our mother tongue?
Here's your chance! This Independence Day, khul ke bol with BOL – Love your Bhasha. Sing, write, perform, spew poetry – whatever you like – in your mother tongue. Send us your BOL at bol@thequint.com or WhatsApp it to 9910181818.)
(At The Quint, we question everything. Play an active role in shaping our journalism by becoming a member today.)