Cinema or Soft Porn?
✍️ From a humble pen
The shameless director of ‘KD’ first serves vulgarity, then justifies it with hollow arguments.
Indian cinema today stands at a dangerous crossroads, where controversy is sold more than content. The new song from Kannada director Prem’s upcoming film “KD: The Devil” is a glaring example of this decline. When big names like Sanjay Dutt and Nora Fatehi are attached, audiences expect a grand cinematic experience, but what they get instead is blatant vulgarity.
This isn’t a ‘metaphor’, it’s directly about sex
Director Prem’s claim that the “bottle” and “intoxication” are metaphors is misleading. The lyrics and visuals clearly suggest otherwise. Phrases like “opening the bottle,” “quenching thirst,” and “getting intoxicated” are used in a way that leaves little to interpretation. This isn’t creativity, it reduces a woman’s body to an object of consumption.
Raqeeb Alam’s ‘rebellion’
The controversy deepened when Hindi lyricist Raqeeb Alam distanced himself. When a writer publicly says, “Don’t give me credit for this song, it’s very dirty,” the defense falls apart. He clarified that the original Kannada lyrics were so crude they couldn’t be adapted into decent Hindi. That alone reveals the intent behind the content.
The fall of star dignity
Nora Fatehi, a global icon, appears less like an artist and more like an object in the song. Should artists not introspect before associating with such content?
Sanjay Dutt, known for memorable roles like Munna Bhai, being part of this is disappointing. Does a pan-India film need such low-grade promotion, and what message does his silence send?
‘Context’ as clickbait
Prem’s argument to “watch the full video before judging” feels like a clickbait tactic, pushing viewers to engage repeatedly and boost publicity.
Can comparing a woman to an intoxicating object ever be justified in any context?
Has art become so weak that it depends on double meanings to attract attention?
Time for the audience to wake up
Films like “KD: The Devil” show that views and trends matter more than responsibility. Freedom of expression is not a license to pollute minds. The way such content is defended reflects arrogance, not artistic conviction.
It’s time for audiences to reject this so-called creativity. As long as vulgarity is consumed as entertainment, it will continue to be sold in the name of cinema.
#BoycottKDSong #ShameOnDirectorPrem #StopObjectifyingWomen #SanjayDutt #NoraFatehi #CinemaOrVulgarity #DignityOverViews #BollywoodReality