Published May 29, 2021
2 mins read
460 words
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Top 5 Banned Movies In India

Published May 29, 2021
2 mins read
460 words

   Sometimes sex, sometimes communalism and sometimes extremism - many films have been made on controversial topics in Indian celluloid. However, the intolerance of reactionaries has always taken these films to the center of controversy. And this is why many internationally recognized films could not see the light of release beyond the constraints of censorship at different times.

1. Night Fire  (1994)

   If someone is an Indian resident, Deepa, who has a reputation for social sector, has repeatedly identified India. Like her controversial film 'Brawl Spand', which came out in 1994, 'Brawl Spand' has become the voice of sexuality love.

   Amidst domestic strife and complexity, a middle-class family became the future of their sexual needs. An international success, acclaim - no less than Mehta, one of the 'masterpieces' of Indian cinema, the film starring Shabana Azmi, Nandita Das.

2. Bandit Queen (1994)

   For the Bollywood world who believes in a hilarious family drama or a hero-heroine's deep love philosophy, 'Bandit Queen' was an entry into a dark world.

   The film 'Bandit Queen' starring Phoolan Devi, popularly known as 'Nari Robin Hood', was released in 1994 with all the unpleasant and uncomfortable incidents.

3. Kama Sutra A Tale of Love (1997)

    Talking openly on sensitive issues like sex is considered a kind of 'taboo' in the subcontinent. And so the spark of controversy did not take long for the release of the sexually dependent Mira Nair's Kamasutr AA Tale of Love.

   The release of this film based on 'sexual competition' between two women was a big hit for a handsome man in a seventeenth-century Indian backdrop! The film features open sex scenes by Indira Verma and Naveen Andrews, which directly express the primitive needs of human sexual behavior without inciting dance songs or the so-called obscenity crisis.

4. Black Friday (2004)

   The Black Friday bombing of Islamic militants in Mumbai in 1993 has been recognized as a masterpiece, but Indian audiences were not prepared to witness the horrors of the rebellion.

5. Gandu (2010)

   All the films that Kaushik Mukherjee aka 'Q' has produced so far have been the subject of controversy. Naming the film as 'Gandu', Q has warned that the film will hurt the normal thinking and intelligence of the general audience.

   A hostile transformation of the modern city of Calcutta - where young Gandu's sexual desires and aspirations are expressed in separate incidents.  Gandu seems to be looking for answers to how the boundaries of a changing society are taking away youth suffering from mental and sexual depression.  The black-and-white film also points to conflicting aspects of Indian customs and culture, as well as religious influence.  The Censor Board of India did not dare to show such films.

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