03-03-2005, 12:23 AM
<!--QuoteBegin-->QUOTE<!--QuoteEBegin-->By Indo-Asian News Service                          Â
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Ahmedabad, March 2 (IANS) "Chand Bujh Gaya" a Hindi feature film based on the
2002 Gujarat communal violence and which features a splitting likeness of
Chief Minister Narendra Modi, is to hit the screens Friday.         Â
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The release of the film, whose title translates as "The Moon Has Been
Eclipsed", was delayed by over a year as the Censor Board wanted drastic cuts
in it but the Bombay High Court, acting on the producer's appeal, ordered it
to be shown in its entirety.                         Â
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<b>The censor board objected to the fact that the character of the Gujarat chief
minister, played by Pratap Singh, was uncannily similar to that of the
original. </b>                                 Â
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The board had also objected to explicit references to places like Godhra,
Vadodara and Surat, apart from several violence-affected neighbourhoods of
Ahmedabad city.                               Â
                                       Â
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Producer Faaiz Anwar then approached the Bombay High Court, which not only
ordered the censor board to pass the film without cuts, but also appreciated
its humanitarian message.                          Â
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                                       Â
<b>The film narrates the love story of a Hindu boy, played by Faisal Khan, and a
Muslim girl, Shama Sikander, against the backdrop of the sectarian strife in
the state that claimed more than 1,000 lives, the majority of them Muslims. </b>Â
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The film <b>also</b> depicts the Godhra train burning that claimed 59 lives and
sparked the statewide violence.   <i>{Thank god for small mercies}                   </i>  Â
                                       Â
                                       Â
"The film is about unity and harmony. We expect a good response from Gujarat,"
director Sharique Minhaj said. <!--QuoteEnd--><!--QuoteEEnd-->
                                       Â
                                       Â
Ahmedabad, March 2 (IANS) "Chand Bujh Gaya" a Hindi feature film based on the
2002 Gujarat communal violence and which features a splitting likeness of
Chief Minister Narendra Modi, is to hit the screens Friday.         Â
                                       Â
                                       Â
The release of the film, whose title translates as "The Moon Has Been
Eclipsed", was delayed by over a year as the Censor Board wanted drastic cuts
in it but the Bombay High Court, acting on the producer's appeal, ordered it
to be shown in its entirety.                         Â
                                       Â
                                       Â
<b>The censor board objected to the fact that the character of the Gujarat chief
minister, played by Pratap Singh, was uncannily similar to that of the
original. </b>                                 Â
                                       Â
                                       Â
The board had also objected to explicit references to places like Godhra,
Vadodara and Surat, apart from several violence-affected neighbourhoods of
Ahmedabad city.                               Â
                                       Â
                                       Â
Producer Faaiz Anwar then approached the Bombay High Court, which not only
ordered the censor board to pass the film without cuts, but also appreciated
its humanitarian message.                          Â
                                     Â
                                       Â
<b>The film narrates the love story of a Hindu boy, played by Faisal Khan, and a
Muslim girl, Shama Sikander, against the backdrop of the sectarian strife in
the state that claimed more than 1,000 lives, the majority of them Muslims. </b>Â
                                       Â
                                       Â
The film <b>also</b> depicts the Godhra train burning that claimed 59 lives and
sparked the statewide violence.   <i>{Thank god for small mercies}                   </i>  Â
                                       Â
                                       Â
"The film is about unity and harmony. We expect a good response from Gujarat,"
director Sharique Minhaj said. <!--QuoteEnd--><!--QuoteEEnd-->
