Heaven On Earth passed by censors without a single cut

This article was last updated on April 16, 2022

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Deepa Mehta’s Heaven On Earth was in censor trouble. The censor board asked her to drastically reduce scenes of domestic violence and to beep out a couple of expletives. Deepa no stranger to censorship, refused. “I told them I won’t make a single cut. And they were welcome to give me an ‘A’ certificate if they wanted. They agreed. Not a single shot from Heaven On Earth (HOE) has been removed.” Deepa is appalled by the double standards in censorship. “Correct me if I’m wrong. But another film Provoked had scenes of domestic violence. And Jennifer Lopez in Enough or Julia Roberts in Sleeping With The Enemy were shown to be far more graphically violated than Preity in Heaven On Earth. Comparatively my film has very little on-screen violence. We’ve just one sequence of domestic violence.” And Deepa wouldn’t let it be touched. “I refused to let them cut a single moment from it. Luckily my distributor Ravi Chopra was with me. He too would settle for no cuts. He said so many films with so much more violence get a ‘U’ certificate. Films showing irrelevant gratuitous violence get passed. But when in Heaven On Earth we show what happens behind closed doors we’re told to cut it out. No way! You’ve horrific stories of young girls being beaten up and abused in Mangalore and Mumbai. If I make a film about it they’ll see these things can’t be shown.” Says Deepa, “The violence in HOE is not manipulative. Wives are physically abused in front of the whole family. Children grow up thinking there’s nothing wrong in beating up women and little girls who witness their mothers being battered actually believe getting beaten up is their destiny.” About the expletives Deepa laughs, “We’ve a whole recent history of Hindi films filled with maa-bahen ki gaali. The kid in Heaven On Earth says the ‘f’ word twice once when his mother tells him to fasten his seat belt. How shocking is that!” Sighs Deepa, “I’m tired of the hypocrisy in censorship. You know, in the days when Asha Parekh was the censor chief they passed my Fire without a single cut and with a ‘U’ certificate. The objection to the film came from the Shiv Sena. And now when there’s rampant violence against women I was asked to cut it down. I said I’d rather not screen the film in India.”
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