The dastardly act of vandalism and assault that took place on Friday on the sets of filmmaker Sanjay Leela Bhansali's film 'Padmavati' at Jaipur has been termed as 'extremely unfortunate, deplorable and totally unacceptable' by the Film & Television Producers Guild of India Ltd.
"The Guild, in unison with the entire film fraternity strongly condemns this despicable episode and expresses its absolute and unflinching support to Bhansali," states a release by the Guild.
Guild President Siddharth Roy Kapur called it a "direct attack on freedom of expression" in India.
"The film industry has become the softest target for any fringe group looking for media attention, and we need the strongest possible intervention from the concerned authorities to end this and to end it now. We stand united and unflinching in our support of Sanjay Leela Bhansali," he states.
"The distressing part is that this is not the first time that fringe elements have unilaterally taken the law into their own hands to disrupt shoots/film releases and cause tremendous financial losses to film producers. The film 'Jodhaa Akbar' was also not permitted to release in Rajasthan by the same group despite censor certification."
Their statement further voices concerns of hooliganism, "It is a glaring paradox that on the one hand the Central Government, various State Governments along with the film fraternity has been leaving no stone unturned to universally project India as an attractive shooting locale and on the other such hands miscreants are resorting to hooliganism of the worst order to defeat the 'Shoot in India' endeavor. Such disparaging incidents not only discourage our film makers to shoot in India, with them preferring to travel abroad for shoots, but also puts foreign producers on the alarm against prospective plans to shoot in Indian locales. The sordid story of these debilitating turn of events is that such misinformed individuals/organizations are not even realizing the structured and methodical manner in which the process of film making evolves at the shooting/release stage and further at the time of certification clearance from the Central Board of Film Certification (CBFC)."
The Guild makes a strong plea to the concerned ministries and authorities to promptly initiate stringent measures against these elements to send out a strong message to other misinformed individuals/bodies that such acts will not be tolerated in the future and thereby provide a timely deterrent against the repetition of these unacceptable incidents.
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