A formal complaint has rocked the CBFC over the provocative song ‘Sarke Chunari Teri Sarke’ featured in Sanjay Dutt and Nora Fatehi’s ‘KD: The Devil’. Critics are up in arms, calling it a blatant display of vulgarity that degrades women to mere props.
In a detailed letter, the complainant highlights how the song’s words shamelessly objectify females, breaching every norm of propriety. Released in Hindi and Kannada, it’s accused of fueling a culture of disrespect, especially among impressionable youth who consume such media voraciously.
The plea to the board emphasizes the song’s role in perpetuating harmful stereotypes, clashing with India’s cultural ethos. Demanding rigorous intervention, it insists the CBFC must censor or ban such material to safeguard public decency.
This isn’t isolated; the film has already drawn scrutiny from NHRC and NCW over similar content. The complainant hopes for a strong response that reinforces the board’s mandate.
As debates rage on social media, the controversy underscores the ongoing tension between artistic expression and moral boundaries in Bollywood and regional cinema. Will the CBFC crack down, or will this become another flashpoint in the censorship wars?