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Mausam hits turbulence with IAF

sudhir007

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Mausam hits turbulence with IAF | idrw.org

Just a week before its release, Pankaj Kapur’s directorial debut “ Mausam” has run into trouble with the Indian Air Force over an action sequence that occurs in the second half of the film. Shahid plays an air force officer in the film, and the scene that the IAF is objecting to is an action sequence involving six fighter planes, one of them commandeered by Shahid.

According to the letter that the air force sent to the producer and the Censor Board, the action sequence is not technically feasible and they would like a small change to be made to make the scene look more realistic. But producer Sheetal Talwar says he has been caught in a spot just days before the movie was to go to the Censor Board for clearance.

The film has been given only a conditional No Objection Certificate (NoC) by the air force, but till the movie doesn’t get full clearance from the force, it can’t be reviewed by the CBFC. When we spoke to Sheetal on Friday morning, he said, “I’m trying to seek a meeting with the concerned officials to make them see my point of view. We had got the script approved a year ago, and even the scene in question was discussed at great length, and a few technical changes were suggested by the air force, which we had accepted. We’ve abided by the book for everything in the movie, but this last moment decision is unexpected. We had sought their advice on the technical issues, such as if the badges are correct, the uniform, etc, but they can’t comment on the script or suggest creative changes now. I have spent `2.5 crore on this particular action sequence and it is impossible to change it now. It will not just involve more time and money, but will also change my movie’s story. It is not possible. If they do not see my point of view, I will be forced to move court.”

Sheetal says that when the air force officials had seen the movie on Tuesday evening, they had said it was alright, but on Wednesday, he was surprised to see the conditional NoC. But a senior air force official told us, “We have no role to play here by interfering in someone’s creative process. We are simply military men. All we have spoken about is a technical unfeasibility. We are just saying that if he makes those changes, it will be more practical. That sort of an action (in the scene) is technically not possible. That is the only change we have asked for.” At the time of going to press, Sheetal was still trying to speak to the concerned officials.

“Mausam” is not the first film to have run into trouble with the defence forces. The release of “Rang De Basanti” had a similar situation when the Indian Air Force objected to a computer-generated sequence showing a MiG-21 crash. The IAF suggested those scenes be cut. The Indian Army had objected to Amitabh Bachchan’s beard in “Major Saab”. In Hrithik Roshan-starrer “Lakshya”, which was set against the Kargil war, the army had objected to references to Bofors guns. The release of the Amitabh Bachchan-starrer “Ab Tumhare Hawale Watan Sathiyo” had been delayed in 2004, and it was reported that an army panel had objected to Bachchan’s portrayal in the film.
 
Who the hell is IAF or IA to give clearance to Indian Films? Its the job of censor board.
 
Am torn between right to creative freedom and the responsibility of film makers to not misrepresent facts in a movie. To be honest I'd rather see a sequence showcasing the actual abilities of a fighter than an exaggerated/misrepresented movie version. But from a film maker's point of view, the actual sequence may not be as visually appealing to the audience.
 
Who the hell is IAF or IA to give clearance to Indian Films? Its the job of censor board.

No need to get(pardon the pun)jetwashed over it.The Indian Censor Board gets the final word on it and not the IAF.
 
IAF wants some of the scene from the movie removed, thats it. IAF has given them opportunity to shoot the movie in side airbase and with fighter aircrafts, now the director must do it.
 
No need to get(pardon the pun)jetwashed over it.The Indian Censor Board gets the final word on it and not the IAF.

IAF will sure pressure the Censor Board. Vested interests had always interfered in creative freedom in India and the main among them is the Censor Board itself. Censor Board is a relic of our socialist past which should be done away with.The only job of Censor Board should be giving out certificates, nothing more.Let the audience decide the outcome.
 
IAF will sure pressure the Censor Board. Vested interests had always interfered in creative freedom in India and the main among them is the Censor Board itself. Censor Board is a relic of our socialist past which should be done away with.The only job of Censor Board should be giving out certificates, nothing more.Let the audience decide the outcome.

They let Rang De Basanti roll out into theaters without cutting out any scenes now didn't they? Patience my friend!
 
IAF will sure pressure the Censor Board. Vested interests had always interfered in creative freedom in India and the main among them is the Censor Board itself. Censor Board is a relic of our socialist past which should be done away with.The only job of Censor Board should be giving out certificates, nothing more.Let the audience decide the outcome.

dont jump the gun . they want to show the air force in a realistic fashion . no harm in that . dont get so excited . after all its only a movie.:)
 
dont jump the gun . they want to show the air force in a realistic fashion . no harm in that . dont get so excited . after all its only a movie.:)

Realistic or not its not the job of IAF to verify...let audience be the judge of that.As you said its a movie, not a documentary.
 
IAF wants some of the scene from the movie removed, thats it. IAF has given them opportunity to shoot the movie in side airbase and with fighter aircrafts, now the director must do it.
Brother you are forgeting one thing that that particular scene had costed 2.5 crores to the producer..and that is not a small amount....and as far as your second comment is concern sir to be frank these type of movies encourage youngsters to choose career in Defence....
 
There's two unrealistic things I can see there.

First, the radar display is something you'd see in a (mechanically scanned) AWACS or ground based radar, not a Mirage-2000. The Mirage-2000 radar doesn't and can't make 360 degree rotating scans.

Second, the engine fire (or whatever it was, hard to tell from the cam video) wouldn't have caused the aircraft to start falling the way it did in the scene.

Personally, I don't see why they couldn't change the scenes. There's very little acting involved, and the CG is really basic and should be incredibly easy to fix.
 
the movie sucked big time . saw it in Delhi as i had time to kill . :hitwall:
 
Staining Video of IAF Mirage-2000 in Mausam

With all its advancement, the Indian cinema still lags behind the hollywood when it comes to making such movies. This particular scene was so not cool. Anyways why do Indian pilot wear white helmets (If thats what you call it) ? Why not grey or dark blue as USAF or PAF does?
 
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