Indian film board criticised for cutting ‘overly sensual’ Superman kisses | India

While the latest Sinemos watched the latest Superman movie, many realized that something was wrong. While leaning for a kiss with the superhero Lois Lane, the film suddenly jumped forward and cut after a hug.
The Indian Censorship Board saw the kissing scenes as “extremely lusty ve for Indian audiences, including a 33 -second SMOOCH, and asked them to be cut off before the cinematic version.
The deductions screamed from some viewers who accused the Central Film Certificate (CBFC) Central Board of Central Council, to make extreme moral demands and to depict in Indian films, but to have double standards by cutting the kissing scene from a Hollywood film.
“CBFC will not allow consent -based kissing in a U/A comic book film that children are allowed to watch freely freely, but in a comic book film that children are allowed to watch freely freely, they will not allow consent -based kissing scenes.
Another said: “So, Superman is not allowed to kiss Lois Lane on the Indian screens. But Indian films are allowed to attract, strike, attack, deviate, slap and do what Indian films want with the heroes of all leading men. Are you a serious, Indian censorship board?”
Another fan criticized the shocking cut caused by raw cuts. “Indian censorship board embarrassed him with the sudden interruptions they made to the film. The ‘morality of censors’ aside, as they managed to barbecue the flow,” he said.
Indian cinema has long had a disturbing relationship with kissing on the screen for a long time. The 1933 Film was largely hugged on the screen until the 1990s, except for a four -minute kissing scene in Karma, or symbolized with images such as flowers.
Although attitudes are comfortable in recent years, the country continues to be largely conservative and widely religious, especially outside the urban areas, and more intimate kissing scenes are still subject to the censorship knife.
The Censorship Board also faced accusations of being extreme political. Donald Trump Biopic Apprentice was prevented from cinematic release last year after the director Ali Abbasi refused to make interruptions requested by CBFC. “I just ran out of Iran’s censorship to meet the corporate censorship of the United States. Now India. Really?” He said Abbasi. “Censorship now seems to be a epidemic.”
Similarly, at the beginning of this year, censorship in fact, after demanding a list of deductions, police forbade the publication of Santosh, an international film that appealed to violence and hostility to women in India. The director of the film described the desires of the Sandhya Suri as “disappointment and heartbreaking”.




