Bollywood appalled as Sanjay Leela Bhansali assaulted on Padmavati set

Bhansali has vowed to never shoot in Jaipur again, source claims


Ians January 29, 2017
Veteran Director Sanjay Leela Bhansali was assaulted on the sets of Padmavati in Jaipur. PHOTO: MASALA

The attack on ace filmmaker Sanjay Leela Bhansali on the sets of his upcoming film Padmavati in Jaipur by activists of a Rajput organisation has left many fraternity members "appalled". They have demanded for a strong action by the government.


On Friday, the Karni Sena activists entered the Jaigarh Fort and assaulted Bhansali, according to the police. They even misbehaved with the crew and criticised the National Award-winning director for "distorting" history in the film about the medieval-era Delhi ruler Alauddin Khilji, who fell in love with Rajput queen Padmavati.

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"He (Bhansali) has packed up and has said he will never shoot again in Jaipur," a source said. Speaking about the incident, Vivek Singh of Karni Sena told IANS, "We had earlier requested him (Bhansali) to show us the script which he did not do. We are against distorting of historical facts and we know that he has distorted historical facts."

Karni Sena claimed they have got a big library. "In no book is it written that Alauddin Khilji fell in love with Padmavati or he was her lover," a senior leader from the organisation said.

The film's lead actors stars Deepika Padukone, Ranveer Singh and Shahid Kapoor have condemned the attack by tweeting that they were in a "state of shock" and had been left "disheartened". "Sanjay sir is one of the most accomplished and authentic filmmakers we have in India, and he won't ever do anything to hurt anyone's feelings," Ranveer tweeted.


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While Shahid posted, "Words do fall short and feel too little to express feelings. Violence is unacceptable. This incident has shocked me. We need to look deep within as a society, as a country, as people...where are we headed."





 

Siddharth Roy Kapur, President of The Film & Television Producers Guild of India  strongly condemned the "acts of vandalism" on the sets of Padmavati as a direct attack on freedom of expression in India's democracy. "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," he said. Kapur urged the "Government of India and the state government of Rajasthan to take immediate steps to ensure the strongest possible punitive action is taken against these miscreants, so it serves as a deterrent in preventing the recurrence of such unacceptable events in the future"

Indian filmmaker Sanjay Leela Bhansali slapped at Jaipur film set

Indian Motion Pictures Producers Association (IMPAA) vice president, Ashoke Pandit said, "It is very saddening and shameful that the incident has happened with an icon like Bhansali. On behalf of IMPPA and director's association, I strongly condemn the attack."

Other Bollywood celebrities like Priyanka Chopra, Shabana Azmi, Rishi Kapoor, Karan Johar, Mahesh Bhatt, Raza Murad, Ashutosh Gowariker, Alia Bhatt and Hrithik Roshan have also lent support to Bhansali.

"Can once the whole film industry come together and take a stand, and refuse to be a pony that all b******t and b************s ride on? At the same time shame on you Karni Sena, you make me feel ashamed to be a Rajput. Bloody spineless cowards. Hindu extremists have stepped out of Twitter into the real world now and Hindu terrorism is not a myth anymore," filmmaker Anurag Kashyap tweeted.







Priyanka, who worked with Bhansali in Bajirao Mastani, said, "Violence is not what our forefathers taught us."



Shabana said that the Indian film industry must "stand as one" and do whatever it takes to ensure that the reprehensible attack on Bhansali becomes a "flash point for 'goondagiri' to stop".

Raza Murad said that attacking the film fraternity has become a "practice these days". "As a democratic country, it is our right to protest. But attacking somebody is illegal. It seems we are in a situation where strong oppresses the weak. This is not a democracy. People don't have a fear of law and order," he said.

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