Rohit said the film should be left with the audience as they have the right to reject or accept it. "It is doing a great business. The whole team has gone through a lot- Bhansali, Deepika, Ranveer, the whole Viacom18 team- they have endured a lot, so, let it remain with the audience now. What's the use if we start talking about what he said or she said. I will not say anything. Let the film breathe now, for God's sake,” he said.
Director Imtiaz Ali said he did not find anything in the film worth protesting against. Ram-Leela co-writers Siddharth Singh and Garima Wahal have penned a counter letter to Swara, saying there are lots of instances in the film which portray Padmavati as a strong-willed woman and in fact the decision to opt for 'jauhar' was hers and not forced upon. "They must have felt like a 'vagina' when she chose 'fire' over 'rape'? It was her 'call', her 'decision' as a vagina. Right, wrong, strong, weak is up to you to interpret as a 'penis' or as a 'vagina'," they wrote on their blog. Actor Suchitra Krishnamoorthi slammed Bhasker's letter. "Aren't these feminist debates on #Padmaavat rather dumb? It's a story ladies - not an advocacy of Jauhar for god's sake. Find another battle for your cause- a real one at all. Not historical fiction," she said.