Anurag Kashyap, the film's co-producer who has been at the forefront of a battle with the Censor Board, and several filmmakers also appealed to people not to watch it online.
The Supreme Court refused to entertain the plea of an NGO seeking stay on the film's release and asked it to approach Punjab and Haryana High Court which is seized of the matter.
A vacation bench of justices Adarsh Kumar Goel and L Nageswara Rao granted liberty to the NGO, Human Rights Awareness Association to approach the High Court with its prayer.
"We are not interfering in the matter. We are not going into the merit. Liberty granted to the petitioner to approach the Punjab and Haryana High Court which is seized of the matter," the bench said. The Bombay High Court had already cleared the film with a cut.
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"Based on the report submitted today, the high court has taken a decision that the film will be released tomorrow and then dismissed the petitions filed against the release of the movie," counsel Sanjay Kaushal said.
He said the high court noted that the film did not glorify drugs. "Drug menace can be there in any state and the film does not glorify drugs," said the counsel.
Amicus curiae advocate Sujoy Kantawala, who watched the movie on the directions of the high court, also presented his report to the bench.
As the film was set hit the theatres tomorrow, the online leak of the film prompted Anurag Kashyap to say that he believed it was a case of vested interests "trying to demoralise" the filmmakers in their fight.
The film's producers yesterday lodged a complaint with the cyber crime police in Bandra yesterday.
The entire film has been leaked on various torrent websites with 'for censor' written on the top left corner of the copy, as questions cropped about about any role by the Censor Board in this regard.
CBFC chief Pahlaj Nahalani, on his part, said "rumours" about the online leak should not be believed. "Please understand the procedure rather than believing in rumours," he said.