Rajnikanth starrer 'Kabali' will have 'crime does not pay' message added at the climax: Malaysian censor board

Film Censorship Board of Malaysia asks the makers of 'Kabali' to add 'crime does not pay' message at the climax for Malaysia's population.

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Nivedita R
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Rajnikanth starrer 'Kabali' will have 'crime does not pay' message added at the climax: Malaysian censor board

Rajinikanth starrer blockbuster movie “Kabali” will have a different ending in Malaysia

Film Censorship Board of Malaysia today said the Rajinikanth starrer blockbuster movie “Kabali” will have a different ending in the country with a message of “crime does not pay” added at the climax. The decision has left local fans of the superstar fuming.

LPF chairman Abdul Halim Abdul Hamid said the board had requested the makers for the alterations in the movie, so that the viewers continue respecting the law. “Normally under our guidelines, there must be some kind of element of retribution in the movie. Especially if the characters shown in the movies are involved in crime, then there must be some kind of comeuppance for that.

“So, we asked the producer to put in a caption... This was to send a message that the law cannot be taken into your own hands,” Abdul Halim told Malay Mail Online.The film ran to full shows yesterday with fans queuing up hours before the show.

Set in Malaysia, the movie features Rajinikanth as a gangster, who was framed for a crime decades ago.The original ending scene in the movie was intentionally left ambiguous, but the local version leaves nothing to the audience’s imagination.

Abdul Halim also admitted that the board had censored several scenes in the Kollywood film, but stressed that all the cuts were only five minutes in total and that the storyline of the movie was still intact.

He explained the cuts were only several seconds long for each scenes, including one controversial scene that included the use of the word “keling” a term derogatory to ethnic Indians in Malaysia. The word was muted in local screenings.

“We have our own guidelines and anything that we feel could be sensitive, we censor. We took off the word and it is better that way because if we do not do that, then the people will allege that we practice selective censorship.”

The scene in the original unedited version has since been slammed in Malay paper Mingguan Malaysia today. An article had accused the film of deliberately flaming racial tensions in the country by portraying the ethnic Indians as an oppressed minority.

Another article also accused the film screenwriter of misunderstanding the lives of the ethnic Indians in Malaysia. Despite that, Abdul Halim said the main reason for the censorship was to make the movie a PG-13-rated film, so it could be seen by more Malaysians. Eight percent of multi ethnic Muslim majority of Malaysia’s population is Indian, mostly Tamil. 

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