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Madras Cafe Image Credit: Supplied

Theatres have been permitted to screen both the Hindi and Tamil versions of John Abraham-starrer Madras Cafe, but the political thriller has been shunned in Tamil Nadu fearing protests from Tamil activists.

The Shoojit Sircar directed film had received the green light by the Central Board of Film Certification (CBFC), but no bookings were done for the film in either multiplexes or single screen theatres.

A senior member of The Theatre Owners’ Association said: “The decision to release the film has been given to individual theatres. Since the government has not banned the film, the theatres are free to screen. But if they feel they might face the wrath of protestors, then we can’t do anything.”

Madras Cafe is set against the Sri Lankan civil war and also depicts the 1991 assassination of former Indian prime minister Rajiv Gandhi. It came under the scanner after Tamil activists alleged that it portrays the LTTE as terrorists.

The LTTE (Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam) were a separatist militant organisation that was based in northern Sri Lanka and waged a violent secessionist campaign to create an independent state in the north and east of Sri Lanka for Tamil people.

“I haven’t watched Madras Cafe, but I have been told that it is anti-Tamil. I don’t know if that’s true but if it is, then we should definitely not encourage its release in the state,” Tamil actor Sathyaraj told reporters on Friday at an audio launch.

Multiplexes fear that releasing the film could make matters worse.

“We fear releasing the film might aggravate the ongoing protests. We don’t want to risk it and, moreover, the decision to screen the film lies with each theatre,” a multiplex representative, on condition of anonymity, said.

Also featuring Nargis Fakhri, Rashi Khanna, Ajay Rathnam and Leena Maria Paul, Madras Cafe is a fictional story inspired by true events.

A representative of the movie’s co-producers Viacom18 Motion Pictures said they had also sought police protection to ensure a smooth release of the film.

Co-produced by John Abraham, who is also playing the lead, the film was shown in Mumbai on August 18 at a special preview. The protestors’ objection against the film grew stronger thereafter.

Tamil filmmaker Seeman, head of Naam Tamizhar (We Tamils) group, said the film was “nauseatingly anti-Tamil”.

In a related development, the Bharatiya Janata Party’s Tamil Nadu unit chief Pon Radhakrishnan had said the movie should not be released in any part of the country.