Kissa Kursi Ka
Kissa Kursi Ka | |
---|---|
Kissa Kursi Ka film poster | |
Directed by | Amrit Nahata |
Produced by |
Bhagwant Deshpande Vijay Kashmiri Baba Majgavkar |
Starring |
Shabana Azmi Raj Babbar Utpal Dutt Rehana Sultan Manohar Singh |
Music by | Jaidev |
Release dates | 1977 |
Running time | 142 min. |
Country | India |
Language | Hindi |
Kissa Kursi Ka (Trans: Tale of Throne) is a 1977 Hindi film directed by Amrit Nahata, who was a member of Indian parliament and produced by Badri Prasad Joshi. The film was a satire on the politics of Indira Gandhi and her son Sanjay Gandhi and was banned by the Indian Government during the Emergency period and all prints were confiscated. Music of the film was composed by Jaidev Verma.[1][2]
Plot
The plot revolved around a corrupt and evil politician Gangaram or Gangu, played by Manohar Singh, trying to woo personified public, depicted as mute and helpless looking (Shabana Azmi.) The movie is a humorous comment over the system and the selfishness of the politicians regarded as a motion picture version of the cartoonist columns that are the most brutal taunt over the politics.
Music
- "Janatha Ki Jai Bolo" - Asha Bhosle, Mahendra Kapoor
- "Sunte Ho Aji Sunte Ho" - Vinod Sharma, Madhur Bhushan, SaritaSethi, Sudhir Pandey, Pradeep Shukla
Cast
- Shabana Azmi as Janta
- Utpal Dutt
- Rehana Sultan
- Manohar Singh as President Gangaram 'Gangu'
- Surekha Sikri as Meera
- Raj Kiran as Gopal
- Chaman Bagga as Deshpal - President's Secretary
- Katy Mirza as Ruby Dixsana
- Swapna Sundari as Dancer / Singer
Ban and print confiscation
The film was submitted to the Censor Board for certification on in April 1975. The film had spoofed Sanjay Gandhi auto-manufacturing plans (later established as Maruti Udyog in 1981), besides Congress supporters like Swami Dhirendra Brahmachari, private secretary to Indira Gandhi R.K. Dhawan, and Rukhsana Sultana. The board sent to seven-member revising committee, which further sent it to Union government. Subsequently, a show-cause notice raising 51 objections was sent to the producer by the Information and Broadcasting ministry. In his reply submitted on July 11, 1975, Nahata stated that the characters were "imaginary and do not refer to any political party or persons". By the time, the Emergency has already been declared.[3]
Subsequently, all the prints and the master-print of the film at Censor Board office were picked up, later brought to Maruti factory in Gurgaon, where they were burned. The subsequent Shah Commission established by Government of India in 1977 to inquiry into excesses committed in the Indian Emergency found Sanjay Gandhi guilt of burning the negative, along with V. C. Shukla, Information and Broadcasting minister of the time.[3][4]
Legal case
The legal case ran for 11 months, and court gave its judgment on February 27, 1979. Both Sanjay Gandhi and Shukla were sentenced to a month and two-year jail term imprisonment. Sanjay Gandhi was denied bail. The verdict was later overturned.[3][4] In his judgment, District Judge, O. N. Vohra at Tis Hazari Court in Delhi, found the accused, guilty of "criminal conspiracy, breach of trust, mischief by fire, dishonestly receiving criminal property, concealing stolen property and disappearance of evidence".[5]
Bibliography
- Amrit Nahata (1977). Kissā kursī kā. Rājapāla. Retrieved 14 June 2013.
- Jagat S. Bright (1979). "14. Kissa Kuris Ka". Allahabad High Court to Shah Commission. Deep & Deep Publications. p. 43.
References
- ↑ "The first ladies of cinema". The Times Of India. Dec 14, 2010. Retrieved 14 June 2013.
- ↑ Abhinav Prakash (2007). Code of Criminal Procedure. Universal Law Publishing. pp. 98–. ISBN 978-81-7534-614-7. Retrieved 14 June 2013.
- 1 2 3 "30 greatest stories revisited: Sanjay Gandhi and 'Kissa Kursi Ka' film lampooning him : Cover Story". India Today. December 18, 2006. Retrieved 14 June 2013.
- 1 2 "1978- Kissa Kursi Ka: Celluloid chutzpah : Cover Story". India Today. December 24, 2009. Retrieved 14 June 2013.
- ↑ "Sanjay Gandhi Guilty In Film Case". St. Petersburg Times. Feb 27, 1979. Retrieved 14 June 2013.