Actress Swara Bhaskar SLAMS Sanjay Leela Bhansali’s ‘PADMAAVAT’ in long open letter
Bollywood actress Swara Bhasker wrote an open letter and expressed what she felt about the movie.




Arent these feminist debates on #Padmaavat rather dumb?. Its a story ladies - not an advocacy of Jauhar for gods sake. Find another battle for ur cause- a real one at all. Not historical fiction
— Suchitra Krishnamoorthi (@suchitrak) January 28, 2018
Funny that an actress who can play an erotic dancer/ prostitute with such elan should feel like a vagina after watching a story of a pious queen . What standards are these ...tch tch — Suchitra Krishnamoorthi (@suchitrak) January 28, 2018Filmmaker Ashoke Pandit wrote: "This is nothing but trying to grab eyeballs with zero rationale and logic. Swara Bhasker has reduced a queen of brain and might to just a female body part. Does more harm to feminism than good."
This is nothing but trying to grab eyeballs with zero rationale and logic. @SwaraBhaskar has reduced a queen of brain and might to just a female body part. Does more harm to feminism than good.#JNUkaAsar. https://t.co/IjwUPlDSM3
— Ashoke Pandit (@ashokepandit) January 28, 2018
It is the most ridiculous argument I have read in recent times. Bhansali didn't push Padmavati into committing Jauhar. He just depicted what had supposedly happened some 800 yrs ago. This is needless attention grabbing and trivalising a masterpiece for 1000 words of "me too" . https://t.co/6yd0IJ3gcV — Ashoke Pandit (@ashokepandit) January 28, 2018Producer Manish Mundra commented: "Now somebody takes fiction seriously and writes open letter about a story 100s of years old. The point is if you make a film from your past, do changes suitably to reflect today's feminism. "Both are in same boat -- those who think a film can change their history and those who think a fictional film from past should be changed suitably to represent today's feminism."
Now somebody takes fiction seriously and writes open letter about a story 100s of years old. The point is if u make a film from your past do changes suitably to reflect today’s feminism.
— Manish Mundra (@ManMundra) January 28, 2018
Both are in same boat those who think a film can change their history and those who think a fictional film from past should be changed suitably to represent today’s feminism. — Manish Mundra (@ManMundra) January 28, 2018Sanjay Leela Bhansali's 'Padmaavat' has Deepika Padukone (Rani Padmavati), Shahid Kapoor (Maharawal Ratan Singh) and Ranveer Singh (Khilji) in the lead roles.
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