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Padmavati row: Would be nicer to feel protected at this point, says Deepika Padukone


In an interview with Talking Movies: India Special for BBC World News, the actress voiced her opinion on the Padmavati row. The show will go on air on Saturday, 25 November.

IANS

After getting several threats over her film Padmavati, actress Deepika Padukone says she would like to feel "safer and protected" at this point of time.

In an interview with Talking Movies: India Special for BBC World News, the actress voiced her opinion on the whole stir. The show will go on air on Saturday, read a statement.

Asked whether she would like to have better protection from the state, she said: "In an ideal world, yes. I think it is too soon to tell... But yes it would be nicer to feel safer or protected at this point."

Sanjay Leela Bhansali's attempt to bring alive the story of Rajput queen Rani Padmavati on the silver screen with his movie Padmavati hasn't gone down well with Hindu groups backed by the BJP (Bhartiya Janata Party). It features Padukone as Rani Padmavati, Shahid Kapoor as her husband and a warrior king, Rawal Ratan Singh, and Ranveer Singh essays Alauddin Khilji.

Bhansali faced many hiccups while shooting the film, but the protests escalated as the film neared its release date. There are conjectures that it "distorts history" regarding the Rajput queen, and Bhansali has denied it repeatedly.

The movie's release date has been deferred from the original 1 December date, but there are efforts from Hindu groups to have it banned.

Talking about all the protests surrounding the project, the Piku (2015) star said: "It is hurtful and it is sad. Cinema has the power to bring the people together, to unite people and to spread love. It is disheartening sometimes that people don't recognize that."

The actress also spoke about the gender dynamics of Indian cinema.

"Yes, I've seen that transition. In the kind of films being made, in the kind of films I'm being offered, in the roles that are being written, and with women behind the camera not just in front of the camera," said the actress, who forayed into Hindi cinema with Om Shanti Om in 2007.

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