Sanjay Leela Bhansali’s much-anticipated motion picture ‘Padmaavat’ has just broken the record for the all-time biggest opening weekend for any Bollywood film in North America grossing $4.4 million over its three-day Friday-to-Sunday debut period and $4.9 million over the four-day Thursday-to-Sunday span.
The previous record was held by Aamir Khan’s 2014 film PK which had an opening weekend of $3.6 million over three days. Khan’s recent hit Dangal held the extended opening weekend record with $4.1 million over its first five days, which ‘Padmaavat’ also beat.
Starring Deepika Padukone, Ranveer Singh, and Shahid Kapoor, the film also set a new record for the biggest single day gross of all-time for a Bollywood movie making $1.85 million on Saturday, January 27. Most Hindi films do not gross that much during their entire runs in North America.
‘Padmaavat’ is now playing in 326 cinemas across the United States and Canada in 2D, 3D, and IMAX 3D formats.
Kuala Lumpur Controversial Bollywood movie “Padmaavat”, which has released in India after a struggle, is now barred from opening in cinemas in Malaysia over concerns regarding “sensitivities of Islam”.
Malaysia’s National Film Censorship Board (LPF) has barred filmmaker Sanjay Leela Bhansali’s “Padmaavat” from getting released in the country.
LPF chairman Mohd Zamberi Abdul Aziz said in a statement that the storyline of the film itself is of grave concern as “Malaysia is a Muslim-majority country”, reports variety.com. “The storyline of the film touches on the sensitivities of Islam. That in itself is a matter of grave concern in Malaysia, a Muslim-majority country,” Aziz said.
Based on 16th century poet Malik Muhammad Jayasi’s poem “Padmavat”, the film was caught in a row in India after protests from a Rajput outfit Shri Rajput Karni Sena over allegations that the movie distorts historical facts. The film was eventually released in India on January 25. The film has had mixed reviews. It has been criticised by some sections for glorifying not just Jauhar and also for showing Alauddin Khilji as a demon-like figure.
The distributor in Malaysia is expected to appeal the LPF decision. Malaysia has a history of banning movies that are widely distributed elsewhere in the world.Last year, it banned Disney’s “Beauty and the Beast” because of its gay moment, before relenting and allowing it a PG13 certificate.
The country also prosecuted filmmaker Lena Hendry last year, for holding a private screening of a documentary “No Fire Zone: The Killing Fields of Sri Lanka.”
Rights advocacy groups say that Malaysia’s censorship laws are used in an arbitrary fashion, and that they are stunting Malaysian filmmaking, which is losing market share in the region.