Kangal Malsat

Kangal Malsat
Directed by Suman Mukhopadhyay
Produced by Pawan Kanodia
Based on Kangal Malsat
by Nabarun Bhattacharya
Release dates
  • 2 August 2013 (2013-08-02)
Country India
Language Bengali

Kangal Malsat ("War Cry of beggars") is a Bengali political film[1] directed by Suman Mukhopadhyay and based on the novel with same title written by Nabarun Bhattacharya. As of February 2013, the Central Board of Film Certification denied approval to the film, citing distortion of history, excessive use of abusive language, sexuality, and the portrayal of social movements in a harmful way.[2] The film got a clearance in the Film Certification Appellate Tribunal in the first week of March 2013.[3] Finally the film is set to be released on 2 August 2013.

Plot

In the Bengali language, the name of the film literally translates to "War cry of the Beggars". The film shows two imaginary groups of contemporary Bengal- Fyataroo: Flying human beings; Choktor: Black Magic sect Bhodi. The head of the Choktors, initiates a total war against the ruling political party of West Bengal, India. Fyataroos join hands with Choktors. Advised by Calcutta's progenitors Dandabayash (ageless primordial talking crow) and an Indo-colonial half-breed Begum Johnson(1732-1818) erupt a historic insurrection. They jointly launch guerrilla attacks against the Government. Skulls dance in crematoria and flying-discs flutter in the skies and cry anarchy, resident ghosts gossip and prattle, and the police is in total confusion. Government is forced to surrender and offer a peace proposal to the joint force. This anarchic film dissects almost everything wrong in the city with a cinematic knife sharpened on trenchant farce and fantasy.[1]

Cast

Controversies

In February 2013, Central Board of Film Certification refused to pass the film. The letter of denial cited excessive use of abusive language, sexuality, frivolous approach in portraying of social movements and negative portrayal of the character Joseph Stalin.[2][4][5]

Mukhopadhyay, the director of the film, was angry that the film was blocked by the censor board and he said in an interview: "It is frightening because it is interference of an artist's work and it is happening again and again in West Bengal. It is not the first time. There was Ambikesh Mahapatra cartoon case, there was the segregation of newspapers and TV channels as friendly and not friendly, there was the student who was called a Maoist because she asked a question. All these small events are symptomatic of a mindset of what I will say are fascist tendencies."[2]

In March 2013, the film was cleared by the tribunal and most objections raised by the Censor Board was rejected by the Film Certification Appellate Tribunal headed by chairman Lalit Bhasin. But, they did not allow to portray the full oath of Mamata Banerjee as West Bengal's Chief Minister, since they felt it was not a biopic on Banerjee and the filmmakers were asked to cut the 76 words' oath by fifty per cent.[3]

The film was also in controversy because of a particular sex scene where swapna sio was shown nude and having explicit sex with a ruling party minister. The scene showed her nude backside and engaging in fellatio and anal sex. This scene was leaked through a MMS and was misinterpreted as Swapna sio having a sexual affair with a real minister.

See also

References

  1. 1 2 Nag, Kushali (17 January 2012). "Hat-trick". The Telegraph, Calcutta. Calcutta, India. Retrieved 1 March 2013.
  2. 1 2 3 "Bengali film, critical of Mamata Banerjee, blocked by regional censor board". NDTV. Retrieved 1 March 2013.
  3. 1 2 "Kangal Malsat cleared by tribunal with cuts". The Times of India. 6 March 2013. Retrieved 7 March 2013.
  4. Das, Mohua (25 February 2013). "Censors cite Stalin & CM!". The Telegraph Calcutta. Calcutta, India. Retrieved 1 March 2013.
  5. "Denial of approval to Kangal Malsat political". The Hindu. Chennai, India. 24 February 2013. Retrieved 1 March 2013.
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