Cpt. Rishwat
T20I Captain
- Joined
- May 8, 2010
- Runs
- 43,385
BJP cooks up row over Bollywood film romance ahead of key poll
Is this where the practice of widow burning or Sati, as it is referred to originated? Seems to be quite a furore in India over this release. I assume that is the case if it has made the headlines over here.
https://www.thetimes.co.uk/article/...wood-film-romance-ahead-of-key-poll-gfd5qm935
A hotly anticipated Bollywood blockbuster has found itself the focus of a political row, with India’s ruling party demanding that its release is delayed because it could inflame religious tensions before elections next month.
Padmavati, a sweeping historical epic about a 14th-century queen of legendary beauty, is set to hit screens across India on December 1. It stars one of India’s hottest celebrity couples but has been dogged by controversy, with sets burnt down and its director assaulted.
To the fury of filmmakers and political opponents, the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) claims that historical inaccuracies in the film could sway elections in western Gujarat, the home state of Narendra Modi, the prime minister. The party has demanded that the film’s release be delayed until after polls close in mid-December.
Starring Deepika Padukone as the eponymous Rajput queen and her real-life partner Ranveer Singh as a marauding Muslim sultan, Padmavati retells events of 1303, when Alauddin Khalji, the Sultan of Delhi, laid siege to Chittor Fort in Rajasthan, obsessed by tales of Padmavati’s beauty and determined to claim her for himself. With her husband killed in a duel and the fort poised to fall, Padmavati self-immolated rather than fall into Khalji’s clutches.
Much of the Padmavati legend is disputed by historians but she remains a symbol of Indian patriotism and is revered by Hindu nationalists for preserving her honour before the invading Muslim aggressor. The BJP and its supporters were appalled, therefore, by rumours that the director, Sanjay Leela Bhansali, had been unable to resist the temptation to bring one of Bollywood’s leading couples together onscreen, and has included romantic scenes between Padmavati and Khalji.
“Padmavati and Khalji never met in real life,” a BJP spokesman said. “Queen Padmavati is presented in a poor light.” The film should not be released before the Gujarat poll, he said. “This is important so that no community is offended, and unnecessary controversies are avoided before elections.”
Mr Bhansali has denied several times that the film features a romantic plotline between the queen and the sultan or a rumoured dream sequence that might bring them together, but Hindu right-wingers continue to hound the film. A gang of hardliners raided the production during shooting, destroying sets and attacking the director.
The BJP’s opponents see the controversy as mere opportunism, intended to galvanise its nationalist base before the vote. The BJP has not lost an election in Gujarat since the 1980s but the state has been hit hard by a slowdown in the Indian economy. The jobs boom that Mr Modi oversaw as chief minister of the state has evaporated and his ill-judged personal interventions as prime minister, including the cash crisis last year and a botched tax rollout in June, are widely blamed for accelerating the slump.
Public anticipation remains undimmed. The first trailer for Padmavati has been watched more than 40 million times, more than the trailer for the next Star Wars movie, The Last Jedi.
Is this where the practice of widow burning or Sati, as it is referred to originated? Seems to be quite a furore in India over this release. I assume that is the case if it has made the headlines over here.