Curated By: Chirag Sehgal
Last Updated: September 24, 2023, 20:58 IST
Vishal Bhardwaj says he did not watch The Kashmir Files or The Kerala Story to stay away from the negativity. (Photos: Instagram)
Vishal Bhardwaj urges his fellow filmmakers to deal “sensitively” with stories that are inspired by real-life tragic incidents.
National award-winning filmmaker Vishal Bhardwaj says he didn’t watch movies like “The Kashmir Files” and “The Kerala Story” as he wanted to stay out of such sensitive subjects. Both “The Kashmir Files” (2022) and “The Kerala Story” (2023) were huge commercial hits but kicked up a political storm with many in the Opposition calling them propaganda films.
“I didn’t see ‘The Kashmir Files’, ‘The Kerala Story’ and I didn’t see them consciously. The kind of things I was hearing about these films, I didn’t want to get impacted by it. I was hearing that they are propaganda films from my friends and people I know,” the filmmaker, who won critical acclaim for depicting the Kashmir conflict in his Shahid Kapoor and Tabu-starrer “Haider”, told PTI in an interview.
“So, I just wanted to stay out of it because, for me, it is a very sensitive subject. If there’s so much negativity I want to remain out of this negativity, I love my peace. So, I didn’t want to see them,” he added.
“The Kashmir Files”, starring Anupam Kher, Darshan Kumar, Mithun Chakraborty, and Pallavi Joshi in major roles, revolved around the exodus of Kashmiri Pandits from the Valley in the 1990s. It was directed by Vivek Agnihotri. On the other hand, “The Kerala Story”, helmed by Sudipto Sen, depicts how women from Kerala were forced to convert and recruited by the terror group Islamic State (IS).
Bhardwaj urged his fellow filmmakers to deal “sensitively” with stories that are inspired by real-life tragic incidents. “I want my community of filmmakers to treat such stories sensitively and not use it as propaganda,” he said.
Asked whether the objective of filmmaking has changed over the years in Hindi cinema, the 58-year-old writer-director said it is bound to as society is also changing.
“Cinema is such a thing that you can use it the way you want. If people are accepting it and seeing it, then we should accept that people are changing. We are changing as a society,” he added.
(This story has not been edited by News18 staff and is published from a syndicated news agency feed – PTI)