Israeli filmmaker Nadav Lapid who criticised The Kashmir Files on the International Film Festival of India (IFFI) in a brand new interview mentioned that he stands by his opinion on the occasion. Nadav was among the many IFFI worldwide jury. He asserted that he “knows how to recognise propaganda disguised as a movie.” Also learn: Israeli filmmaker Nadav Lapid now calls The Kashmir Files ‘brilliant movie’
At IFFI, Nadav Lapid referred to as The Kashmir Files a ‘propaganda movie’ that had no place on the worldwide movie pageant. His comment on the closing day drew criticism from folks related to the movie, political and Indian public on social media. The Kashmir Files is directed by Vivek Agnihotri and narrates the exodus of Kashmiri Pandits in 1990.
Reacting to the backlash over his comment, Nadav informed Israeli newspaper Ha’aretz, “Making bad films is not a crime, but this is a very crude, manipulative and violent propaganda film.” He mentioned he feels it’s his obligation to talk his thoughts as a member of the worldwide jury. “The truth is that I also couldn’t help but imagine a similar situation that might happen one day soon in Israel, and I would be happy that in such a situation the head of a foreign jury would be willing to say things as he sees them. In a way, I felt it was my duty to the place that invited me,” he added.
Nadav additional continued and mentioned that The Kashmir Files was “pushed into the official competition” of IFFI. “We learned that the film was pushed into the official competition of the festival due to political pressure… I feel as a foreigner who arrives there, you have an obligation to say the things that the people who live there may have a harder time saying. In such contexts, I don’t believe in secrets and whispers. If you stand on stage and are asked to speak, what will you talk about? Only about the beaches, you saw and the food you ate?” he added.
Nadav, who admitted to not having ‘enough’ knowledge about the Kashmir conflict, also claimed that ever since he spoke against the film, he received ‘hundreds of emails and messages’ from Indian film personalities who are ‘happy about it.’ “Since this is a film that the Indian government encourages, I assume that the government there is not happy about it. But is a country only about its government? I assume not. What I said is not comfortable for the Government of India, nor for the government in the making in Israel, which the ambassador there represents,” he mentioned.
Written and directed by Vivek Agnihotri and produced by Zee Studios, The Kashmir Files was called out for its problematic politics by a section of critics during release. It started slowly at the box office and later performed extraordinarily, minting over ₹330 crore by way of word-of-mouth.
Reacting to Nadav’s feedback, The Kashmir Files director Vivek Agnihotri introduced The Kashmir Files Unreported. “I challenge the world’s intellectuals and ‘urban Naxals’ as well as the great filmmaker who came from Israel if they can prove that any shot, dialogue or event of ‘The Kashmir Files’ is not absolute truth, I’ll stop making films. I’m not someone who will back down. Issue as many fatwas as you want, but I’ll keep fighting,” he mentioned.
(With inputs from PTI)