Close X
Sunday, November 24, 2024
ADVT 
Bollywood

We Will Follow The Law: Pakistan CBFC Chief On 'Phantom'

Darpan News Desk, 13 Aug, 2015 12:32 PM
    The decision to release a film or not depends on the law and is not driven by controversies, says the Pakistan censor board chief in reaction to 26/11 mastermind and Jamaat-ud Dawa (JuD) chief Hafiz Muhammad Saeed's petition demanding a ban on the release of Indian film "Phantom" in the country.
     
    "We have a clear set of laws and rules as legislated by the parliament. We have to comply with the law. (It's as) Simple as that," Fakhr-e-Alam, Central Board of Film Censors (CBFC) chairman, told IANS from Karachi in an interview through social media.
     
    "Our job is not to get involved in controversies or respond to everyone and everything. We will follow the law and take decisions according to law," he added.
     
    "Phantom" is a political thriller inspired by "Dongri To Dubai" writer Hussain Zaidi's "Mumbai Avengers", which is based on the aftermath of the 26/11 terror attacks in which 10 Pakistani terrorists sneaked into Mumbai from the sea in November 2008 and killed 166 Indians and foreigners.
     
    The movie, starring Saif Ali Khan and Katrina Kaif, is directed by Kabir Khan - the filmmaker whose past project "Kabul Express" elicited protests from some quarters in Pakistan for reflecting the "traditional anti-Pakistan and anti-Islam mentality of India", and whose "Ek Tha Tiger" was banned in Pakistan following allegations that it portrays the neighbouring country's intelligence agency in a bad light.
     
    However, Kabir Khan's 'Bajrangi Bhaijaan', a Salman Khan-starrer that propagates a positive message of peace, unity and brotherhood, went houseful in Pakistan despite initial hiccups in its release.
     
    After its release, Satish Anand, head honcho of Eveready Group of Companies which distributed 'Bajrangi Bhaijaan' in the nation, had told IANS that they had faced a lot of problems in bringing the movie to screens due to its trailer and because it was from the director whose film 'Ek Tha Tiger' never got released in the country.
     
     
    Even Fakhr-e-Alam had via a Twitter account claimed he received threats for allowing the release of 'Bajrangi Bhaijaan', which ended up regaling a majority of the audience with its heartwarming story about an Indian man who comes to the rescue of a lost six-year-old mute girl from Pakistan.
     
    In an earlier email interview to IANS, he had said: "There are good and bad elements everywhere in the world. There are still some who have not come to terms with the fact that the world has moved into the 21st century. The threats do not deter us...we believe in betterment and growth."
     
    He had given the green signal to 'Bajrangi Bhaijaan' and requested cinema owners to be more alert and vigilant in case some violence erupted.
     
    "I took the necessary precautions, but we ensured 'Bajrangi Bhaijaan' was not disrupted. Wish Maharashtra government had done the same for 'Bin Roye'," he said in reference to the Mahira Khan-starrer on which Maharashtra Navnirman Sena called for a statewide ban last month.
     
    "Bangistan", directed by Karan Anshuman, is known to be another Bollywood film banned in Pakistan this year.
     
    But Fakhr-e-Alam said the CBFC is the "last stop when a foreign film is imported" and that there's a process every foreign movie needs to go through before reaching the big screen in his nation.
     
    Pakistan had banned Indian movies in 1968 but lifted this ban later. Aamir Khan's "Taare Zameen Par" is said to have been the first Indian film to make its way into Pakistan's cinema halls after the ban was lifted. Since then, a plethora of Hindi films have entertained movie buffs across the border, thawing the otherwise strained bilateral ties between the two nations.

    MORE Bollywood ARTICLES

    Karan Patel To Shoot Consummation Scene In Front Of Wife?

    Karan Patel To Shoot Consummation Scene In Front Of Wife?
    Actress Ankita Bhargava will reportedly be present on the sets of TV show "Ye Hai Mohabbatein" to witness the shooting of the consummation scene between the show's lead pair -- her husband and actor Karan Patel and actress Divyanka Tripathi.

    Karan Patel To Shoot Consummation Scene In Front Of Wife?

    Director resorts to crowdfunding for Nandita Das-starrer

    Director Soumitra Ranade’s "Albert Pinto Ko Gussa Kyun Aata Hai?", starring Nandita Das, Manav Kaul and Saurabh Shukla, will be raising Rs.30 lakh through a crowdfunding campaign on funding platform Wishberry.

    Director resorts to crowdfunding for Nandita Das-starrer

    Happy Friendship Day: Bollywood Stars Wish All

    Happy Friendship Day: Bollywood Stars Wish All
    Bollywood celebrities like Farhan Akhtar, Bipasha Basu and Karan Johar, who popularised the Friendship Day through his directorial debut

    Happy Friendship Day: Bollywood Stars Wish All

    Mumbai Cricket Association Lifts Ban On Shah Rukh Khan

    Mumbai Cricket Association Lifts Ban On Shah Rukh Khan
    The Mumbai Cricket Association (MCA) on Sunday lifted the ban it imposed three years ago on Bollywood superstar Shah Rukh Khan from entering the Wankhede Stadium here.

    Mumbai Cricket Association Lifts Ban On Shah Rukh Khan

    Thulla Effect: Complaint Against Aamir Khan For Calling Policemen 'Thulla' In 'PK'

    Thulla Effect: Complaint Against Aamir Khan For Calling Policemen 'Thulla' In 'PK'
    A complaint has been filed by short filmmaker Ullhas PR against Bollywood superstar Aamir Khan for calling Delhi Police officials “thulla” in his 2014 blockbuster “PK”.

    Thulla Effect: Complaint Against Aamir Khan For Calling Policemen 'Thulla' In 'PK'

    Friendship Day: Farhan Gets Nostalgic Over 'Dil Chahta Hai'

    Friendship Day: Farhan Gets Nostalgic Over 'Dil Chahta Hai'
    Farhan took to Twitter to share a snapshot of the first sequence of the 2001 film, in which the three actors are seen together.

    Friendship Day: Farhan Gets Nostalgic Over 'Dil Chahta Hai'