Four scenes from the film were deleted on order of the Bombay High Court but this is not apparently one of them
Shaadi.com approached the Bombay high court against the use of their portal's name in the Amit Roy-directed or the title
The makers of Akshay Kumar's Jolly LLB 2 accepted The Bombay Hgh Court's judgement and will release the film with four cuts
Jolly LLB 2: The Bombay High Court ruled that Akshay Kumar's film can be screened only after four controversial shots in the movie are removed. The court had appointed a three-member committee to review the film
Central Board of Film Certification chief Pahlaj Nihalani, who suggested 89 cuts in Udta Punjab, has wished luck to the producers and distributors of the film which released on Friday.
Filmmaker Zoya Akhtar reacted on the piracy issue after Udta Punjab leaked online Wednesday night and said industry is already bleeding a lot of money due to taxation and piracy adds to it.
Udta Punjab hit the screens on Friday and moviegoers were at theatres to support the film, which was leaked online two days before release. "I don't support piracy first of all. I am going to watch this movie and also going to ask all my friends to watch it in theatres only,' said a cinegoer.
Udta Punjab co-producer Anurag Kashyap said: "There's been tremendous support from the industry, from the bigwigs, from all the associations, from people and from the media. This kind of support makes me feel overwhelmed and scared."
Actor Salman Khan was photographed on his way to the Bombay High Court on December 10. The court had asked him to be present when it pronounced its verdict in the appeal against his conviction in the 2002 hit-and-run case. The actor can't be convicted on the basis of evidence produced, the judge said in his comments that appeared to signal a major reprieve for the Bollywood superstar.