Satyajit Ray's historic documentary Sikkim
had its screening cancelled on Thursday at the Kolkata Film Festival
(KFF) after being banned by a court order citing violation of copyright
laws.
A District Judge ordered the stay on a petition by
Atul Kaura, secretary of Art & Culture Trust of Sikkim, an NGO
supposedly working for the preservation of ethnic Sikkimese art and
culture.
The film cannot be screened without our permission
when the copyright is with us. Even the censor certificates are with
us, where we have been credited as the producers of the film, Ugyen
Chopel, managing trustee of the body, said.
Claiming exclusive possession of a sole 35 mm print
and two DVD versions of the film, he alleged that the film festival
authorities were showing a pirated version of the documentary.
We have cancelled all the screenings as of now. But
we will challenge the decision in the court, KFF director Nilanjan
Chatterjee said.
The 52-minute documentary, commissioned by the last
Chogyal (king) of Sikkim, Palden Thondup Namgyal, has remained shrouded
in controversy ever since it was made by the Oscar winning director in
1971. The Chogyals first banned the film after a few scenes went
against their liking. When the Himalayan kingdom merged with India in
1975, the Indian government also banned it.
In 2000, the copyright of the film was transferred to
the Art and Culture Trust of Sikkim. A damaged print of the film was
restored by the Ganktok-based trust in 2002 with the support of The
Academy of Motion Pictures, Art and Science in California.
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