Theatre owners stopped screening of ‘The Kerala Story’ due to poor box office collections, lack of big stars, T.N. government tells SC

The State said it exercised no control over the decision of theatre owners to withdraw the film

May 16, 2023 09:44 am | Updated 10:51 am IST - NEW DELHI

The Hindustan Makkal Sevai Association staging a demonstration at the Coimbatore Collectorate in the city on May 15, asking the State to run the movie ‘The Kerala Story’ in multiplexes.

The Hindustan Makkal Sevai Association staging a demonstration at the Coimbatore Collectorate in the city on May 15, asking the State to run the movie ‘The Kerala Story’ in multiplexes. | Photo Credit: M. Periasamy

Tamil Nadu has told the Supreme Court that it is helpless if theatre owners across the State have decided to stop the screening of the film ‘The Kerala Story’ within two days of its release owing to reasons including poor audience response.

“Multiplex owners took the decision to stop screening the film from May 7 in view of the criticism received by it/lack of well known actors, poor performance and poor audience response,” the State said.

The movie in Hindi, the State said, was in fact released on May 5 in 19 multiplexes. Tamil Nadu said it exercised no control over the decision of theatre owners to withdraw the film.

Also Read : Explained | ‘The Kerala Story’: Can a work of fiction or art constitute ‘hate speech’?

“The multiplex owners themselves have cited poor box office collections owing to the absence of any popular stars in the film as the reason to stop the screening of the film... The exhibitors have themselves stopped the screening of the movie due to poor audience response and the government cannot do anything to increase the audience patronage for the film,” the State emphasised.

In fact, the Supreme Court had itself, in a hearing in early May, said the people would ultimately decide if a film was worth a watch or not. The court had touched upon the money “sunk” into the project by the film’s makers and the labour put in by the actors. At the time, multiple petitioners had argued in the apex court that the film demonised the entire Muslim community, particularly Muslim youth, with “malicious propaganda” that girls in Kerala were lured through ‘love jihad’ and trafficked to West Asia to join ISIS.

Tamil Nadu said the filmmakers were trying to gain publicity for the movie under the garb of filing a petition in the Supreme Court, accusing the State of imposing a “shadow or implicit” ban on the release of the film on May 5.

They are misusing the process of the Supreme Court, the State alleged. It said the filmmakers had made a “deliberate false statement” that the Tamil Nadu government had prevented the public exhibition of the film. The State, through the Additional Director General of Police (Law and Order), said the filmmakers had not produced a single shred of proof to support their allegation that the Tamil Nadu government had banned the movie.

“There is no order whatsoever banning the screening of the film in the State. Petitioners have failed to produce even a single document or order or proof showing that the State took steps to ban the screening of the film,” the State said in its affidavit.

On the other hand, the government said it had taken “all steps to safeguard the freedom of speech and expression of the filmmakers. It had taken adequate security measures like deployment of the police and registering FIRs against the protestors… The state machinery has been put on high alert to facilitate the unhindered screening of a certified film”.

The State said the filmmakers’ allegation that the government “informally signalled the theatre owners that it will not support in case of any untoward incident” if the film was screened was “baseless”.

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