The Sunday Guardian

‘Congress’ criticism of is knee-jerk reaction’

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“BJP-sponsored film” and had condemned the “false depictions” of Indira Gandhi and Sanjay Gandhi in the movie. Maharashtr­a Congress leader Sanjay Nirupam had even asked for a separate screening of the movie for Congress leaders, so that the party could ensure that their leaders were “not shown in a bad light”. “They (the Congress) should have waited for the movie to release. They formed a poor judgement of the movie based on a threeminut­e trailer. The controvers­y they spun around my movie was unexpected and totally uncalled for,” Bhandarkar told this reporter. Calling Sanjay Nirupam’s demand “unreasonab­le”, Bhandarkar had refused to screen his movie for any political party.

Meanwhile, a petition to seek a stay on the movie by Priya Singh Paul, the woman who claims to be the biological daughter of Sanjay Gandhi, was rejected by the Bombay High Court on Monday. Paul had filed the petition on the grounds of the movie trailer is “maligning the image of her father (allegedly Sanjay Gandhi)”. Bhandarkar, however, was unfazed, and attributed the plea’s rejection to Paul’s failure to prove that the film’s characters bore any resemblanc­e to the Gandhis, or that the film maligned them in any way.

“I don’t have much of an idea about who Priya Singh Paul is, or what she has been up to. She had been trying to stall the release of the movie, but clearly she could not do so since her petition was rejected by the Bombay High Court,” Bhandarkar said. On being asked if there was any private word between him and the Congress leaders on the controvers­y, Bhandarkar denied any private interactio­n, saying that the public war of words should have been avoided.

The revising committee of the CBFC cleared Indu Sarkar on Wednesday. “Indu Sarkarhas been passed with just two cuts and one disclaimer, and I am happy with that,” Bhandarkar said.

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