India's Central Board of Film Certification (CBFC) chief Pahlaj Nihalani, who has in the past faced ire for many reasons, has said that the board doesn’t have different yardsticks for content on same-sex love. He said that the body is not homophobic and it does not follow any separate guidelines.
Questions about the board being homophobic rose when it gave a music video an ‘A’ certificate. The newly-released gay music video entitled "Miss You" by Sharif D. Rangnekar showed two men in love, loving, fighting, separating and missing each other.
"Not at all," said Nihalani.
"We have no problem or concern with the gender of two people in love, as long as they conduct themselves within the guidelines that have been provided to us," he said.
It is believed that the censor board clamped down on same-sex scenes in Hansal Mehta's "Aligarh" and Pan Nalin's "Angry Indian Goddesses".
Nihalani protests against the protesters.
"No cuts are made on the basis of the gender of the people involved. We evaluate films with homosexual content by the same yardstick as films about heterosexual content."
Regarding the music video under scrutiny, Nihalani said: "We cleared the music video 'Miss You' more than a fortnight ago with an 'A' certificate and one cut. Why the hue and cry now? I am afraid filmmakers will have to find other ways of getting noticed. Blaming the censor board to draw attention to your work just won't work."
(With IANS Inputs)