The Kerala Story | |
---|---|
Directed by | Sudipto Sen |
Written by |
|
Produced by | Vipul Amrutlal Shah |
Starring | |
Cinematography | Prasantanu Mohapatra |
Edited by | Sanjay Sharma |
Music by |
|
Production company | Sunshine Pictures[1] |
Release date |
|
Running time | 138 minutes[2] |
Country | India |
Language | Hindi |
Budget | ₹15–20 crore[3] |
Box office | est. ₹303.97 crore[4] |
The Kerala Story is a 2023 Indian Hindi-language drama film directed by Sudipto Sen and produced by Vipul Amrutlal Shah.[1] It stars Adah Sharma, Yogita Bihani, Sonia Balani, and Siddhi Idnani. The plot follows a group of women from Kerala who are coerced into converting to Islam and joining the Islamic State.[5][6] Marketed as a true story, the film is premised on the Hindutva conspiracy theory of "love jihad",[7] and claims that thousands of Hindu women from Kerala have been converted to Islam and recruited in the Islamic State.[8][9] However, the filmmakers had to accept the addition of two disclaimers — that the figures in the film were inauthentic, and that the film was a "fictionalised" depiction of their minds.[10]
The Kerala Story released in theatres on 5 May 2023. With a worldwide gross of ₹303.97 crore (US$36 million), it became the ninth-highest-grossing Hindi film of 2023.[11][12] It was heavily promoted by the incumbent Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), which leveraged the film in its campaigning for the Karnataka assembly election.[13][14] However, film critics accorded it overwhelmingly negative reviews, characterising the work as Islamophobic propaganda.[15][16][6] The film has also faced protracted litigation and protests, primarily in Kerala, West Bengal and Tamil Nadu.
Plot
Fatima is accused of being a terrorist and caught on the Afghan -Iran border during the interrogation she revels that her name is Shalini Unnikrishanan and from Kerala who was brain washed into becoming a terrorist.Shalini lived with her mother and grandmother in Kerala who went to study nursing in the city and met three friends Nimah Matthew,Gitanjali and Asifa. The three girls bonded well and Asifa who belonged to a Islamic Jihadi group would always tell them that there is only one religion and one god in the world and people who wont believe him will not attain salvation.Asifa along with Abdul and Rameez creates such situation among the girls that out of fear Shalini and Gitanajali start to wear Hijab and start to believe that no other god exits.While Nimah who feels something fishy decides to spend less time with the group and parts away.Shalini becomes pregnant with Abdul and is forced to accept Islam but Abdul flees as per the plan and she is forced to marry Ishaq believing secure future for her and her kid.But what Shalini does not know is that she will be illegally deported across many borders and taken to Syria to become a suicide bomber.
Cast
- Adah Sharma as Shalini Unnikrishnan / Fatima Ba
- Yogita Bihani as Nimah Mathews
- Sonia Balani as Asifa Ba
- Siddhi Idnani as Geethanjali Menon / Anisha Ba
- Devadarshini as Shalini's mother
- Vijay Krishna as Ishak
- Pranay Pachauri as Rameez
- Pranav Misshra as Abdul
- Pranali Ghogare as Shaziya
Production and release
The film was produced by Vipul Amrutlal Shah, who is also the creative director.[1]
It released in theatres on 5 May 2023.[17] The digital streaming rights of the film were purchased by ZEE5.[18] The film premiered on ZEE5 from 16 February 2024.[19][20]
Prior to its domestic release, the film went through CBFC scrutiny and received an adults only classification following a number of requested changes.[21]
Premise and factual accuracy
The teaser released on 3 November 2022,[22] featuring the character of Fathima Ba, a Hindu Malayali nurse who had converted to Islam and joined the Islamic State, before ending up in an Afghan jail.[23] She claimed to be one of 32,000 girls from Hindu and Christian communities who are missing from Kerala and have been recruited into the Islamic State after being converted to Islam.[8] Sen, the director of the film, has made such claims for years.[23][8] In 2018, he directed a documentary on what he claimed to be the involuntary mass conversion of 32,000 Hindu and Christian girls to Islam as part of an "international conspiracy" to render Kerala an Islamic state.[24][25][26]
While the events portrayed in the film are loosely based on the accounts of three women from Kerala, namely: Nimisha Nair, Sonia Sebastian, and Merin Jacob, who converted to Islam and traveled with their respective husbands to Afghanistan to join the Islamic State between 2016 and 2018, the claimed figures in the film are wildly inaccurate, being based on mistranslations, misquotes, and misrepresentations of unrelated statistics.[27][28][8] No more than 100-200 Indians have joined the group from the entire country, with people from Kerala accounting for less than a quarter of them.[8] The figures posited in the film also exceed the entire strength of the Islamic State.[29]
Later, in response to litigation, the film-makers removed all promotional materials, including the teaser, that had the erroneous figure.[30] However, the film repeated the claims multiple times, and once raised it even higher to 50,000.[31] In response to further litigation, Sen admitted to all figures in the film being inauthentic, and that the film was a "fictionalised" portrayal of real-life events.[10]
Response and controversy
Promotion by ruling party
The ruling Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) and its associated organisation, the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS) have supported the film; the party used it for their political messaging in the campaigning for Karnataka assembly elections.[29][32] Prime Minister Narendra Modi endorsed the film at an election rally in Karnataka, claimed that it had unearthed a "conspiracy", and alleged the Indian National Congress — which opposed the film — to support terrorism.[32][33] BJP President J. P. Nadda held special screenings of the film and invited "young Hindu girls" to watch it with them.[32] The film was made tax free in Madhya Pradesh as well as Uttar Pradesh; both the states have BJP governments.[34] Organiser, the official mouthpiece of RSS, described the film as a "dangerous truth".[29]
Political opposition
In Kerala, both the Communist Party of India (Marxist) and Indian National Congress, the only two parties to have governed the state since Independence, have objected to the film for spreading "communal misinformation" in tune with the agenda of the Sangh Parivar.[23][35][36] In Tamil Nadu, protests were held by Naam Tamilar Katchi (NTK) and multiple Muslim political organisations.[15]
Public protests
The film has attracted public protests in Kerala and Tamil Nadu.[33][37] It fared poorly in Tamil Nadu, apparently forcing the Tamil Nadu Multiplex Association to stop further screenings; however, the filmmakers dispute the claims and allege political censorship.[15] The film had a similar fate in Kerala.[37]
Bans and litigation
On the eve of release, several petitions were filed at the Madras High Court, Kerala High Court and the Supreme Court of India, calling for a ban on grounds of promoting communal disharmony.[38] The petitions were either declined to be heard or dismissed by the courts;[39] however, the film-makers were asked to remove all promotional materials, including the teaser, that claimed thirty two thousand girls to have converted to Islam and joined the Islamic State in real life.[30]
On 8 May, the Government of West Bengal banned the movie, characterising the film as "hate speech", and citing adverse intelligence reports that had reported increased communal tensions in the audience.[40] The filmmakers challenged the decision in the Supreme Court and the ban was stayed.[41] However, the filmmakers had to accept the addition of two disclaimers — that the figures in the film were inauthentic, and that the film was a "fictionalised" portrayal of real-life events.[10]
Reception
Box office
On its opening day, the film grossed ₹8.03 crore in India,[42] making it the fifth highest opener in India for 2023.[43] As of 15 June 2023[update], the film had grossed ₹288.04 crore (US$35 million) in India and ₹15.64 crore (US$1.9 million) overseas for a worldwide gross collection of ₹303.97 crore (US$36 million), becoming the seventh-highest grossing Hindi film of 2023.[4] The film performed well in northern India but underperformed in the south.[37]
Critical reception
On the review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes, 14% of 7 critics' reviews are positive, with an average rating of 3.5/10.[44]
Saibal Chatterjee of NDTV rated the film 0.5 out of 5 stars, calling it a "lengthy WhatsApp forward", and writing that Sen's work was laughably inept and in pursuance of an insidious agenda.[45] Shubhra Gupta of The Indian Express gave the film 1 out of 5 stars, characterising it as a "poorly-made, poorly-acted rant" that flattened Muslims into absolute evils.[46] Nandini Ramnath of Scroll.in found the raison d'être of the film to lie in propagating Islamophobia, with every Muslim character being coded as a fanatic.[47] Anuj Kumar of The Hindu described the work as "burlesque" propaganda that borrowed its understanding of Islam, from "hate-filled Whatsapp groups" and sought to turn the audience into purveyors of hate by peddling "half-truths".[48]
Deepanjana Pal, reviewing for Film Companion, commented that the film was a "Giant Whatsapp forward" that could be hardly called a film, critiquing it for being political propaganda aimed at demonising Keralite Muslims and tapping into contemporary Hindu nationalist anxieties; Sen was "glaringly inept" in tackling the causes of radicalisation with sensitivity and merely preyed upon the grief of real survivors and victims.[49] Sowmya Rajendran, reviewing for The News Minute, rated the film 1 star out of 5 star; she panned the film as "no-nuance propaganda" where women were treated as objects who were to be fought for between religions and ideologies by men.[31][50][51][52][53][54]
Music
The music of the film is composed by Viresh Sreevalsa and Bishakh Jyoti.
No. | Title | Lyrics | Singer(s) | Length |
---|---|---|---|---|
1. | "Pagal Parindey" | Ozil Dalal | Sunidhi Chauhan, Bishakh Jyoti | 2:04 |
2. | "Ambo Ambambo" | Viresh Sreevalsa | Athul Narukara | 1:52 |
3. | "Athira Ravil" | Viresh Sreevalsa | K. S. Chithra | 2:07 |
4. | "Tu Mila" | Ozil Dalal | K. S. Chithra | 2:07 |
5. | "Aakhir Kyun" | Anant, Porshia (Kurdish), Mahalakshmi Iyer | Bishakh Jyoti | 5:01 |
6. | "Aakhir Kyun Unplugged" | Anant | Bishakh Jyoti | 5:08 |
See also
- The Kashmir Files, a 2022 Indian film by Vivek Agnihotri about the exodus of Kashmiri Hindus
- Territory of the Islamic State#India
- Islamic State – Hind Province, the claimed Indian province of the Islamic State
- Foreign fighters in the Syrian Civil War and War in Iraq#India
References
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- ^ "Bollywood Top Grossers Worldwide: 2023". Bollywood Hungama. Archived from the original on 26 January 2023. Retrieved 13 June 2023.
- ^ Hungama, Bollywood (8 January 2024). "From Jawan's Rs. 600+ crores to 21 films earning in Rs. 0-1 crore range, here are the MOST DEFINITIVE box office RECORDS of 2023". Bollywood Hungama. Retrieved 10 January 2024.
- ^ "'The Kerala Story' takes centre stage as other issues pushed to back-burner in Karnataka polls". English.Mathrubhumi. 10 May 2023. Archived from the original on 19 May 2023. Retrieved 19 May 2023.
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{{cite news}}
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External links
- 2023 films
- 2020s Hindi-language films
- 2023 drama films
- Hindi-language drama films
- Indian drama films
- Films about missing people
- Films about human trafficking in India
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- Love jihad conspiracy theory
- Films about Islamic terrorism in India
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