|
Censorship and festivals don’t go
together, say filmmakers
From Noreen Aslam
BOMBAY—The
issue of censorship rules for films festivals has raised its head once
again here ahead of the 11-day International Film Festival of India (IFFI)
beginning here Thursday, with documentary filmmakers opposed to the
current policy.
“IFFI 2006 has the precise rules the Bombay high court stuck down for
the National Film Awards in June, especially regarding the ‘no censor
certificate requirement’ for Doordarshan/student films though a
certificate is required for all other films,” said award winning
filmmaker Rakesh Sharma.
IFFI, which is hailed as “India’s Cannes”, showcases both feature and
non-feature films.
Film censorship has been a major issue for directors, especially those
in the documentary world, for whom free expression is a crucial part of
their attempts to raise crucial and often critical issues. Anand
Patwardhan, a well-known independent filmmaker, told IANS: “”It is most
unfortunate that the government has not understood the spirit and logic
behind the High Court judgement on the National Film Awards.”
According to Patwardhan, the court had ruled that when the task before a
jury is to select the best films in the country, and when there already
are provisions within the law to exempt film festival spaces from
censorship, there is no reason to insist on censor certificates as a
pre-requisite to eligibility. “By extension, the same logic should have
applied to the Indian Panorama (section in the IFFI) so that the best
films could be selected, regardless of certification,” he said.
Anand Patwardhan is known for his deep involvement with civil liberties
and democratic rights. His “War and Peace” (2001) made news when the
Central Board for Film Certification (CBFC) refused to give a
certificate to the film without making cuts, and ‘uncertified’ films
were disallowed from entering government-sponsored film festivals.
Sharma pointed out the politics involved in selection of films.
“Several documentaries that won international awards are totally missing
from the (IFFI 2006) Indian Panorama list. These include Gaurav Jani’s
‘Riding Solo to the Top of the World’, Amudhan’s ‘Pee’ and Atul Gupta’s
‘Waiting’, about the missing in Kashmir. ‘Final Solution’ (by Sharma
himself) has won 20 international awards by now,” said Sharma.
He brought out the “curious” case of his ‘Final Solution’, which talks
about the perils of religious fundamentalism and intolerance in India
today.
In 2004, it was stuck at the censors and didn’t get invited to the IFFI,
despite winning two awards at Berlin. In 2005, the government disallowed
the film from the National Film Awards on grounds that it had obtained a
censor certificate but not in that year. “So though it was produced in
2004 and won awards in 2004, for the directorate of film festivals, the
film simply did not exist in 2004 - it was made only in 2005!” said a
woeful Sharma.
In its June 2006 judgement, the Bombay High Court questioned the logic
and consistency of the policy framed by the government of India for the
screening of films for festivals in India - both national and
international.
Several networks against censorship have been launched. Films For
Freedom, India, calls itself an “action platform” of over 300 Indian
documentary filmmakers. They have come together as a “Campaign Against
Censorship” in response to an “attempt by the Mumbai International Film
Festival to impose censorship on Indian films”, according to the group.
The CBFC notes that it is “popularly known as the Censor Board” and
reminds visitors to its site that “all films meant for public
exhibition, irrespective of their length, whether in celluloid or video
or CD or DVD version are subjected to censorship.”
It quotes the Supreme Court of India saying: “Film censorship becomes
necessary because a film motivates thought and action and assures a high
degree of attention and retention as compared to the printed word.
Therefore, it has as much potential for evil as it has for good and has
an equal potential to instil or cultivate violent or good behaviour”. |