Shaikh had filed a lawsuit in opposition to the film’s producer, Sajid Nadiadwala, director, Vishal Bhardwaj, and author, Hussain Zaidi, on the City Civil Court in Kalaghoda in an try to forestall its launch.
O Romeo Release Row: A Mumbai court docket declined to halt the discharge of the movie O Romeo on Saturday, February 7, refusing interim aid to Sanober Shaikh, the daughter of late gangster Hussain Shaikh (alias Hussain Ustara), who claimed the movie was primarily based on her father’s life. The court docket decided that she couldn’t make a case for an injunction in opposition to the movie’s producers and filmmakers.
Sanober Shaikh strikes court docket in opposition to…
Shaikh had filed a lawsuit in opposition to the film’s producer, Sajid Nadiadwala, director, Vishal Bhardwaj, and author, Hussain Zaidi, on the City Civil Court in Kalaghoda in an try to forestall its launch.
Plaintiff says father aided police, confronted…
She stated that her journalist father was permitted to put on a bulletproof vest whereas working for presidency organisations just like the Intelligence Bureau and the police. According to the lawsuit, he was slain as a result of he threatened organised prison syndicates, equivalent to Dawood Ibrahim’s gang.
Filmmakers deny similarity
The film, in line with the filmmakers, is a piece of fiction with express disclaimers in Hindi and English. It doesn’t establish the lifeless, nor does it purport to be a biography or have any factual resemblance to the plaintiff’s father.
What did the court docket rule?
After listening to either side, the court docket said, “The film has already received certification from the statutory authority. The plaintiff has admittedly not challenged the said certification before the appropriate forum. The courts have consistently held that once a film is certified, prior restraint through injunctions must be exercised with extreme precaution.”
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