Monday, July 13, 2026

Cinema, State and the Politics of Memory

 

The Satluj Controversy and the Shrinking Democratic Space for Political Cinema in India

By: Ramphal Kataria

Abstract

The withdrawal of Satluj from the Indian catalogue of the ZEE5 streaming platform within forty-eight hours of its release has once again placed the relationship between cinema, the State and constitutional democracy under intense public scrutiny. The film, originally conceived as Ghallughara, later retitled Punjab 95, and eventually released as Satluj, narrates the life and disappearance of human rights activist Jaswant Singh Khalra, whose investigations into thousands of alleged illegal cremations during the militancy period in Punjab became one of the most disturbing human rights episodes in post-Independence India. Before reaching audiences, the film reportedly remained entangled in the certification process for more than three years, during which the Central Board of Film Certification (CBFC) is widely reported to have proposed approximately 127 modifications. Unable to secure an acceptable theatrical certification, the filmmakers ultimately released the film directly on an OTT platform under a different title. Within two days, however, access to the film was withdrawn from Indian viewers following governmental intervention reportedly based on national security concerns.

The Satluj episode raises questions that extend far beyond the fate of a single film. It compels renewed examination of the constitutional limits of State power over artistic expression, the evolving legal architecture governing digital platforms, and the increasingly contested terrain where historical memory, political authority and public discourse intersect. More fundamentally, it raises a normative question central to every constitutional democracy: who determines which versions of history may legitimately enter the public sphere?

This article argues that controversies surrounding political cinema cannot be understood merely as disputes over certification or public order. They represent struggles over collective memory, constitutional freedoms and democratic accountability. By situating Satluj within India's long history of censorship—from colonial legislation to contemporary digital regulation—the article analyses how successive governments, irrespective of ideological orientation, have attempted to shape cultural narratives. At the same time, it explores whether recent developments indicate a qualitative transformation in the relationship between cinema and the State. Drawing upon constitutional jurisprudence, comparative legal practice, political theory and historical experience, the article seeks to locate the Satluj controversy within the broader debate over freedom of expression in twenty-first century India.

"Every act of censorship is ultimately an attempt to regulate not merely speech, but memory."

Introduction: When Cinema Becomes a Constitutional Question

Cinema has rarely been confined to entertainment alone. Since the earliest decades of the twentieth century, films have functioned as repositories of memory, instruments of political mobilisation, vehicles of social reform and, at times, sites of ideological contestation. Every nation constructs narratives about itself through monuments, textbooks, museums and cinema. Among these, cinema possesses a uniquely persuasive capacity because it combines image, sound and emotion into a compelling historical experience that often reaches audiences far beyond the readership of academic history.

Precisely because cinema possesses such persuasive power, governments have consistently attempted to regulate it. Democratic States justify regulation on grounds such as public order, national security, obscenity or communal harmony, while critics frequently view censorship as an instrument through which governments suppress uncomfortable histories or inconvenient political criticism. The tension between artistic autonomy and governmental regulation therefore represents one of the oldest constitutional dilemmas confronting modern democracies.

India's constitutional experience illustrates this tension with unusual intensity. The framers of the Constitution guaranteed freedom of speech and expression under Article 19(1)(a), recognising that democracy depends upon the unrestricted circulation of ideas. Simultaneously, Article 19(2) authorises the State to impose reasonable restrictions in the interests of sovereignty, security, public order, decency and several other constitutionally recognised grounds. The central constitutional challenge has always been determining where legitimate regulation ends and impermissible censorship begins.

The controversy surrounding Satluj has reopened precisely this constitutional debate. Although the immediate issue concerns the removal of a single film from a digital platform, the larger questions concern democratic governance itself. Can governments indirectly prevent citizens from viewing politically inconvenient narratives? Does digital distribution alter constitutional protections traditionally available to cinema? Should historical interpretation become contingent upon executive approval? Most importantly, can democratic societies preserve public confidence when State institutions appear to regulate access to contested histories?

I. The Journey from Ghallughara to Punjab 95 to Satluj

The story of the film itself mirrors the political sensitivity of its subject.

The project reportedly began under the title Ghallughara, invoking a Punjabi term historically associated with periods of collective trauma and mass violence. The title itself generated considerable political sensitivity because of its historical and emotional significance within Sikh collective memory. The filmmakers later adopted the title Punjab 95, explicitly referring to the year of Jaswant Singh Khalra's disappearance.

The film subsequently entered one of the longest certification disputes witnessed in recent Indian cinema. Public statements by the filmmakers indicate that the Central Board of Film Certification reportedly proposed approximately 127 cuts and modifications before granting certification for theatrical release. The proposed changes reportedly included modifications to dialogues, visual depictions, references to institutions, names of officials and scenes relating to police operations. The director publicly maintained that accepting such extensive alterations would fundamentally compromise the narrative integrity of the film.

Unable to secure a theatrical release under conditions acceptable to the creative team, the film was eventually retitled Satluj and released directly on the ZEE5 streaming platform on 3 July 2026. Unlike theatrical exhibition, OTT content operates under a different regulatory framework and is not subject to prior certification by the CBFC.

However, within approximately forty-eight hours, ZEE5 removed the film from its Indian catalogue while continuing to make it available internationally through ZEE5 Global. Public reporting indicated that the Government had raised concerns under the legal framework governing online intermediaries and digital publishers, and that an Inter-Departmental Committee would examine the matter. No detailed public blocking order was simultaneously released, prompting renewed debate about transparency, due process and the scope of executive authority over digital platforms.

II. Why Satluj Matters Beyond One Film

The significance of Satluj does not lie solely in whether one agrees with its historical interpretation. Democratic constitutionalism does not require citizens to accept every artistic representation as historically definitive. Rather, it requires that competing interpretations ordinarily remain available for public debate unless they demonstrably fall within constitutionally recognised limitations.

Political cinema performs a distinctive democratic function. Unlike official histories, films often foreground the experiences of marginalised communities, victims of violence, dissidents and whistle-blowers whose narratives may remain absent from institutional memory. Whether such portrayals are persuasive, exaggerated or incomplete is ultimately a matter for public criticism, scholarly research and counter-speech rather than executive suppression.

The life of Jaswant Singh Khalra occupies precisely such a contested constitutional space. His investigations into unidentified cremations during Punjab's insurgency generated extensive judicial proceedings, human rights documentation and public controversy. Courts subsequently convicted several police officials in connection with his abduction and killing. Consequently, any cinematic representation of his life inevitably engages questions concerning accountability, State violence, institutional legitimacy and historical memory.

Removing or restricting access to such narratives therefore raises broader democratic concerns. It shifts the debate from the accuracy of artistic representation to the institutional legitimacy of controlling historical discourse. Once governments acquire broad discretion to determine which historical narratives may circulate, the distinction between regulating harmful speech and regulating inconvenient memory becomes increasingly difficult to maintain.

III. Cinema and the Politics of Collective Memory

Political philosophers have long argued that States derive legitimacy not merely through constitutional institutions but also through shared historical narratives. National identities are constructed around collective memories of wars, independence struggles, constitutional achievements and social movements. Cinema has become one of the principal means through which these memories are reproduced across generations.

Yet memory is never politically neutral. Every historical narrative foregrounds certain events while marginalising others. Films dealing with communal violence, insurgency, caste discrimination, Emergency-era excesses or State repression inevitably provoke disagreement because they challenge established understandings of national history.

This explains why disputes surrounding political cinema recur across ideological regimes. Different governments have, at different moments, objected to films portraying colonial resistance, communal violence, insurgencies, religious identities, political leaders or security institutions. The constitutional issue is therefore not confined to any one political party or historical period. Rather, it concerns the enduring temptation of all governments to exercise influence over public memory through regulation of visual culture.

IV. The Emerging Constitutional Question

The Satluj controversy signals a transition in the nature of censorship itself.

Historically, disputes centred upon the CBFC's power to certify theatrical films under the Cinematograph Act. Digital streaming platforms, however, have altered that institutional landscape. OTT platforms originally emerged as spaces with comparatively greater creative autonomy because they were not subject to pre-certification. Recent regulatory developments—including the Information Technology Act, 2000, the Information Technology (Intermediary Guidelines and Digital Media Ethics Code) Rules, 2021, and the use of Section 69A blocking powers—have introduced new mechanisms through which executive authorities may influence digital content.

Consequently, constitutional scrutiny must now extend beyond traditional film certification towards questions of digital governance, intermediary liability, transparency of blocking orders and procedural safeguards. The legal distinction between theatrical censorship and digital regulation is rapidly becoming one of the defining constitutional issues of contemporary India.

"The constitutional issue is not whether citizens must agree with a film's interpretation of history. The issue is whether the executive should possess the power to determine which interpretations may be viewed at all."

 

The controversy surrounding Satluj should not be understood merely as a dispute over one film or one filmmaker. Rather, it represents a constitutional moment that compels reconsideration of the relationship between artistic freedom, governmental authority and democratic accountability. As India transitions from traditional cinema halls to digital platforms, the legal architecture governing expression is undergoing profound transformation. Whether this transformation strengthens constitutional democracy or expands executive discretion remains an open question.

The chapters that follow therefore move from the immediate controversy to the broader constitutional framework. The next chapter examines the legal architecture governing freedom of expression in India, tracing the evolution of film censorship from the Constituent Assembly debates to the regulation of digital platforms under the Information Technology Act and the IT Rules, 2021.

The Constitutional Architecture of Freedom of Expression: Cinema, Censorship and the Digital State

"The liberty of thought and expression is not protected because it is convenient for governments. It is protected precisely because governments are often tempted to suppress inconvenient ideas."

I. Why Constitutional Democracies Protect Offensive Ideas

Every constitutional democracy confronts a fundamental paradox. On the one hand, the State possesses a legitimate responsibility to preserve public order, protect national security and maintain constitutional stability. On the other hand, democracy derives its legitimacy from the unrestricted circulation of ideas, criticism and dissent. Reconciling these competing imperatives has remained one of constitutional law's most enduring challenges.

Freedom of speech is not merely another individual liberty among many. It constitutes the institutional foundation upon which every other democratic freedom rests. Citizens cannot effectively exercise electoral choice, participate in public deliberation or hold governments accountable unless they possess access to competing ideas and competing interpretations of history. Consequently, modern constitutional theory increasingly recognises freedom of expression as both an individual right and a structural guarantee of democratic governance.

Political cinema occupies a particularly sensitive position within this constitutional framework. Unlike ordinary commercial entertainment, films dealing with historical conflicts, communal violence, insurgencies or governmental conduct shape public memory itself. They transform archival records, judicial findings and scholarly debates into narratives capable of reaching millions of citizens. Consequently, governments frequently perceive political cinema not merely as artistic expression but as an intervention in the political sphere.

The controversy surrounding Satluj illustrates precisely this constitutional tension. The dispute is not simply whether the film presents an accurate account of Jaswant Singh Khalra's life. Democracies have never required historical narratives to be unanimous. Rather, the constitutional question concerns whether executive authorities may determine which historical narratives citizens are permitted to view. This distinction lies at the heart of Article 19 of the Constitution.

II. The Constituent Assembly's Vision of Free Expression

One of the remarkable features of the Indian Constitution is that it emerged from a society that had experienced colonial censorship for nearly two centuries. British India had witnessed repeated prosecutions under sedition laws, press restrictions, preventive censorship and emergency regulations. Newspapers were seized, books prohibited and nationalist literature criminalised.

The framers were acutely conscious that independent India could not inherit these colonial practices without undermining the moral legitimacy of the Republic.

During the Constituent Assembly Debates, freedom of speech was therefore conceived not as a concession from the State but as an inherent democratic guarantee. Although members differed on the permissible scope of restrictions, there existed broad consensus that criticism of government must remain constitutionally protected.

Dr. B.R. Ambedkar repeatedly emphasised that constitutional democracy required institutional safeguards against executive excess. While acknowledging that no freedom could be absolute, he insisted that restrictions must remain exceptional rather than becoming instruments of routine governance.

The original Constitution, as adopted in 1950, reflected this liberal aspiration. Article 19(1)(a) guaranteed every citizen the right to freedom of speech and expression. Significantly, the Constitution did not create separate categories for newspapers, books, theatre, cinema or artistic expression. Judicial interpretation would later recognise that films are fully protected within the constitutional guarantee.

III. Article 19: The Constitutional Balance

The architecture of Article 19 reveals an elegant constitutional compromise.

Article 19(1)(a) establishes the rule.

Article 19(2) establishes the exception.

The relationship between the two is critical. Restrictions derive their constitutional legitimacy only because the Constitution first guarantees liberty.

Article 19(2) presently permits reasonable restrictions on grounds including:

· sovereignty and integrity of India;

· security of the State;

· friendly relations with foreign States;

· public order;

· decency or morality;

· contempt of court;

· defamation;

· incitement to an offence.

These grounds are exhaustive. Governments cannot invent new constitutional justifications merely because expression is politically inconvenient.

The Supreme Court has repeatedly held that "reasonable restriction" requires far more than governmental disagreement with speech. A restriction must satisfy tests of legality, necessity, proportionality and procedural fairness.

This distinction assumes particular importance in controversies involving political cinema. Films criticising governments, security agencies or historical leaders do not automatically threaten public order merely because sections of society disagree with their content. Democratic constitutionalism presumes that disagreement should ordinarily be answered through debate rather than suppression.

"Article 19 protects speech not because it is harmless but because democracy cannot survive if only harmless ideas are allowed to circulate."

IV. Why Cinema Enjoys Constitutional Protection

For many years, governments argued that cinema required stricter regulation because films exert greater emotional influence than books or newspapers. This argument formed the basis of pre-certification under the Cinematograph Act.

The Supreme Court accepted that films possess a uniquely persuasive medium. However, it simultaneously recognised that cinema remains constitutionally protected speech.

The landmark judgment in K.A. Abbas v. Union of India (1970) became the first comprehensive constitutional examination of film censorship in independent India.

Justice Hidayatullah acknowledged that films combine visual imagery, music and narrative in ways capable of influencing audiences more powerfully than printed literature. Consequently, the Court upheld the constitutional validity of pre-censorship.

However, the judgment imposed equally important limitations.

The Court held that:

· censorship cannot become arbitrary;

· certification standards must be publicly known;

· decisions remain subject to judicial review;

· restrictions must bear a rational relationship to constitutional objectives.

Although K.A. Abbas upheld censorship, it simultaneously constitutionalised it by requiring legality, transparency and accountability.

This distinction is often overlooked.

The judgment did not authorise governments to suppress political criticism merely because it embarrassed public authorities.

V. From Censorship to Constitutional Liberty

Nearly two decades later, the Supreme Court fundamentally expanded free speech jurisprudence through S. Rangarajan v. P. Jagjivan Ram (1989).

This judgment transformed Indian constitutional law.

Justice K. Jagannatha Shetty observed:

"Freedom of expression cannot be suppressed on account of threat of demonstration or processions or threats of violence."

The Court rejected what later scholars described as the "heckler's veto."

If groups threaten violence against a film, the constitutional obligation rests upon the State to maintain law and order—not to silence the filmmaker.

The Court delivered one of the most celebrated passages in Indian free speech jurisprudence:

"Freedom of expression cannot be held to ransom by an intolerant group of people."

This principle remains central to contemporary debates surrounding controversial cinema.

Whether objections arise from religious groups, political organisations or governments themselves, constitutional protection cannot become contingent upon anticipated public outrage.

VI. Bobby Art International and the Mature Constitutional Standard

The constitutional evolution continued in Bobby Art International v. Om Pal Singh Hoon (1996) concerning Bandit Queen.

The film depicted sexual violence with disturbing realism.

The Court refused to isolate individual scenes from the overall narrative.

Instead, it held that artistic works must be judged as a whole.

The decision recognised that unpleasant truths cannot always be portrayed through pleasant imagery.

Violence shown to condemn violence cannot be equated with glorifying violence.

This reasoning later became influential in evaluating films depicting communal conflict, insurgencies and human rights abuses.

VII. The Judicial Shift from Morality to Liberty

The twenty-first century witnessed another important transformation.

Indian constitutional jurisprudence gradually shifted from protecting governmental morality towards protecting individual autonomy.

This broader constitutional movement became visible in judgments involving privacy, sexuality, internet freedom and digital speech.

The Court increasingly emphasised proportionality rather than administrative discretion.

This evolution culminated in Shreya Singhal v. Union of India (2015).

Although the case primarily concerned Section 66A of the Information Technology Act, its significance extends far beyond social media.

The Court recognised that vague statutory powers produce a chilling effect upon legitimate expression.

People begin censoring themselves long before governments formally prohibit speech.

The decision reaffirmed that constitutional protection extends not merely against prosecution but also against arbitrary executive power capable of discouraging public discourse.

This principle has profound implications for digital streaming platforms.

If online publishers reasonably anticipate unpredictable governmental intervention, they may begin excluding politically sensitive subjects altogether.

Such self-censorship rarely appears in official statistics.

Yet constitutional scholars increasingly regard it as one of the most serious threats to democratic expression.

VIII. Development of philosophy of censor

By the second decade of the twenty-first century, Indian constitutional jurisprudence had developed a coherent philosophy: cinema is protected speech; restrictions must remain exceptional; executive action must be transparent, proportionate and open to judicial review; and the State's response to controversial ideas should ordinarily be protection of lawful expression rather than its suppression.

The emergence of OTT platforms, however, has complicated this constitutional settlement. Traditional cinema was regulated through prior certification under the Cinematograph Act. Digital platforms are governed through a different legal architecture rooted in intermediary liability, executive blocking powers and online content regulation. Whether these newer mechanisms preserve the constitutional safeguards developed by the Supreme Court—or create fresh avenues for executive control—is the central question of the next section.

From Film Certification to Digital Regulation: OTT Platforms, Section 69A and the Expanding Reach of Executive Power

"The transition from cinema halls to digital platforms has not eliminated censorship; it has transformed its legal architecture."

IX. The Digital Revolution and the Constitutional Challenge

The emergence of Over-the-Top (OTT) streaming platforms represents the most significant transformation in visual media since the arrival of television. Platforms such as Netflix, Amazon Prime Video, SonyLIV, JioHotstar and ZEE5 have fundamentally altered not merely the economics of film distribution but also the constitutional relationship between the State and artistic expression.

Unlike theatrical films, OTT content was originally conceived as internet-based communication rather than public exhibition. Consequently, it remained outside the certification regime established under the Cinematograph Act, 1952. This distinction enabled filmmakers to address politically contentious themes, complex social issues and historical events without undergoing prior scrutiny by the Central Board of Film Certification (CBFC).

The digital medium therefore created what many scholars described as a new constitutional space for artistic autonomy. Independent filmmakers increasingly preferred OTT platforms because they could present longer narratives, retain historical complexity and avoid the extensive modifications often demanded for theatrical release.

The release of Satluj on ZEE5 was itself an illustration of this evolving constitutional landscape. After reportedly remaining in the certification process for more than three years and facing approximately 127 proposed modifications, the filmmakers chose not to pursue theatrical exhibition under those conditions. Instead, the film appeared directly on an OTT platform under a different title.

Yet the events following its release demonstrated that the absence of prior certification does not necessarily imply the absence of governmental regulation. Rather, censorship has migrated from preventive certification to digital governance. The constitutional question is no longer whether films require certification before release, but whether executive authorities may effectively achieve the same result through post-publication blocking powers exercised under internet regulation.

X. Section 69A of the Information Technology Act: The Architecture of Digital Blocking

The principal statutory foundation for executive blocking of online content is Section 69A of the Information Technology Act, 2000, introduced through the Information Technology (Amendment) Act, 2008.

Unlike the Cinematograph Act, which regulates films before public exhibition, Section 69A empowers the Central Government to direct intermediaries or online platforms to block public access to digital information under specified circumstances.

The provision authorises blocking where it is considered necessary or expedient in the interests of:

· sovereignty and integrity of India;

· defence of India;

· security of the State;

· friendly relations with foreign States;

· public order; or

· preventing incitement to the commission of cognisable offences.

These grounds substantially mirror the restrictions enumerated under Article 19(2) of the Constitution.

However, the constitutional legitimacy of Section 69A does not arise merely because it reproduces constitutional language. Rather, it depends upon the procedural safeguards accompanying its exercise.

The Blocking Rules framed under the Act prescribe an elaborate procedure requiring examination by a designated committee, opportunity for hearing in ordinary circumstances, recording of reasons and approval by the competent authority. These safeguards recognise that blocking online content constitutes a serious restriction upon constitutional speech and therefore cannot depend solely upon executive discretion.

Nevertheless, the Rules also contain an emergency procedure, permitting immediate blocking where delay is considered unacceptable. Such emergency powers inevitably create constitutional tension because they permit restrictions before the ordinary procedural safeguards become fully operational.

The Satluj controversy has revived this debate. Public reports suggest that the film was removed following governmental intervention and that the matter would subsequently be placed before an Inter-Departmental Committee. If correct, this sequence raises an important constitutional question: should the executive be permitted to remove content first and examine legality later, particularly where the content concerns matters of historical interpretation and public debate?

XI. Judicial Review and Shreya Singhal: Why Procedure Matters

The constitutionality of Section 69A reached the Supreme Court in Shreya Singhal v. Union of India (2015).

The Court struck down Section 66A of the Information Technology Act as unconstitutional for its vagueness and chilling effect on free expression. Importantly, however, it upheld Section 69A, not because the power to block content was inherently benign, but because the statutory framework incorporated procedural safeguards that distinguished it from Section 66A.

Justice Rohinton F. Nariman emphasised several features that rendered Section 69A constitutionally sustainable:

· blocking must occur only on narrowly defined statutory grounds;

· reasons must be recorded;

· decisions remain subject to judicial review;

· procedural safeguards reduce the risk of arbitrary censorship.

The judgment thus reaffirmed a fundamental constitutional proposition: the legality of restrictions depends not only upon substantive grounds but also upon fair procedure.

This principle is of profound importance. If blocking orders remain confidential, if reasons are unavailable to affected parties or the public, or if judicial review becomes practically difficult, then the procedural safeguards recognised in Shreya Singhal risk becoming illusory.

Transparency therefore performs a constitutional function. It enables courts, citizens and scholars to examine whether executive action genuinely serves national security or merely suppresses politically inconvenient expression.

"Constitutional legitimacy does not arise because the executive invokes national security. It arises because the executive demonstrates, through transparent procedure, why restrictions satisfy constitutional standards."

XII. The Information Technology Rules, 2021: A New Regulatory Landscape

The Information Technology (Intermediary Guidelines and Digital Media Ethics Code) Rules, 2021 introduced an entirely new regulatory architecture for online publishers and OTT platforms.

Unlike the CBFC's prior certification model, the Rules establish a layered system of self-regulation, industry oversight and governmental supervision.

Publishers are expected to classify content according to age suitability, maintain grievance redress mechanisms and adhere to a Code of Ethics. At higher levels, self-regulatory bodies and government oversight mechanisms become involved where disputes remain unresolved.

Supporters of the Rules argue that they merely extend accountability to digital publishers comparable to that already applicable to print and broadcast media. According to this perspective, digital platforms exercise enormous influence over public opinion and therefore cannot remain entirely beyond constitutional regulation.

Critics, however, contend that the Rules substantially expand executive influence over online expression. They argue that governmental participation in the oversight structure risks blurring the distinction between independent regulation and executive control.

This debate acquired additional complexity when portions of the Rules relating to the Code of Ethics became the subject of constitutional challenges before various High Courts. The litigation reflected broader concerns regarding the compatibility of executive oversight with constitutional guarantees under Article 19(1)(a).

Although judicial scrutiny continues to evolve, the controversy demonstrates that digital regulation has become one of the principal constitutional frontiers of free speech jurisprudence in India.

XIII. Certification and Blocking: Two Different Constitutional Philosophies

One of the most significant misconceptions in public discourse is the assumption that CBFC certification and digital blocking are constitutionally identical.

In reality, they operate according to fundamentally different legal philosophies.

The CBFC performs preventive certification before public exhibition under the Cinematograph Act.

Section 69A authorises post-publication restriction after digital dissemination.

The distinction is constitutionally significant.

Preventive certification permits modifications before audiences view the work.

Blocking removes access after publication.

Consequently, executive intervention under Section 69A often affects not merely future dissemination but also public discourse already generated by the work.

In the case of Satluj, reports indicate that the film remained available long enough for thousands of viewers to watch it before its withdrawal from Indian streaming services. Public discussions, reviews and social media debates had already commenced. The subsequent removal therefore became part of the controversy itself, illustrating how digital censorship frequently generates greater public attention than the underlying work.

This phenomenon, sometimes described in comparative scholarship as the "Streisand Effect," demonstrates a paradox of contemporary censorship: attempts to suppress information may inadvertently increase public curiosity and circulation through informal digital networks.

XIV. National Security and Constitutional Proportionality

No constitutional democracy disputes that genuine threats to national security may justify restrictions on expression. Article 19(2) expressly recognises this possibility.

The constitutional issue lies elsewhere.

The question is not whether national security constitutes a legitimate ground.

Rather, it is how courts evaluate executive claims of national security.

Modern constitutional jurisprudence increasingly employs the doctrine of proportionality.

Under this doctrine, restrictions upon fundamental rights must satisfy four broad requirements:

1. Legality — the restriction must be authorised by law.

2. Legitimate Aim — it must pursue a constitutionally recognised objective.

3. Necessity — less restrictive alternatives should be considered.

4. Proportionality — the restriction should not impose excessive burdens relative to the objective sought.

The Supreme Court has progressively incorporated proportionality into Indian constitutional law, particularly in decisions concerning privacy, internet access and administrative discretion.

Applied to digital censorship, proportionality requires courts to examine not merely whether national security has been invoked, but whether the restriction represents the least restrictive means available to address the identified concern.

This approach reflects international constitutional practice across democratic jurisdictions and seeks to preserve both security and liberty without permitting one to extinguish the other.

XV. Satluj and the Future of Digital Constitutionalism

The constitutional significance of Satluj extends far beyond one film. It marks an inflection point in India's transition from twentieth-century censorship to twenty-first-century digital governance.

Earlier controversies centred on certification boards, scissors and theatrical release. Contemporary disputes increasingly concern algorithms, streaming platforms, intermediary obligations and executive blocking powers.

The institutional actors have changed.

The constitutional questions have not.

Every democracy must determine how much authority governments should possess to regulate historical narratives circulating through digital media. Equally, every democracy must decide whether executive assertions of public order or national security should ordinarily be accepted at face value or remain subject to rigorous judicial scrutiny.

The answers given today will shape not merely the future of cinema but the constitutional character of India's digital public sphere.

The evolution from the Cinematograph Act to the Information Technology Act illustrates a profound transformation in the legal mechanisms through which expression is regulated. While the forms of regulation have changed—from prior certification to post-publication blocking—the constitutional commitment to legality, transparency, proportionality and judicial oversight remains constant. The Satluj episode underscores the continuing importance of these principles in an era where the State's regulatory reach increasingly extends beyond cinema halls into the digital ecosystem.

The State, Cinema and Collective Memory: A History of Political Censorship in India (1947–2026)

"Governments rarely censor films because they fear fiction. They censor films because fiction has the capacity to reshape history in the public imagination."

I. Cinema as a Site of Political Power

The relationship between cinema and political authority has never been accidental. From the earliest decades of the twentieth century, governments across the world recognised that moving images possess a persuasive power unmatched by newspapers, books or political speeches. Cinema does not merely narrate events; it recreates them emotionally. It enables audiences to experience history rather than simply read about it. Consequently, every modern State has sought, in varying degrees, to influence the stories that appear on the screen.

Political theorists have long argued that power operates not only through coercive institutions such as legislatures, courts and police forces, but also through culture. Antonio Gramsci's concept of cultural hegemony explains how political authority is sustained when governments and dominant social groups succeed in shaping common sense, public memory and accepted historical narratives. Benedict Anderson similarly demonstrated that nations are "imagined communities" constructed through shared stories, symbols and collective memories. Cinema has become one of the most influential institutions through which those memories are created, contested and transmitted across generations.

The French historian Pierre Nora distinguishes between lived memory and lieux de mémoire—sites of memory—through which societies remember their past. In contemporary democracies, films increasingly function as such sites. For millions of citizens, historical understanding is shaped less by archival documents or academic monographs than by cinematic representation. Consequently, disputes over films frequently become disputes over the ownership of history itself.

This relationship assumes particular importance in societies marked by partition, communal violence, insurgencies, Emergency rule, caste conflict or political repression. Such societies possess multiple and often competing memories of the same historical events. Governments may privilege one narrative as essential to national unity, while filmmakers, historians and civil society organisations seek to foreground experiences that official narratives marginalise. Political cinema therefore becomes a contested constitutional space where historical memory, artistic freedom and State authority intersect.

The controversy surrounding Satluj must be understood against this broader historical backdrop. It is not merely a dispute over one film depicting the life of Jaswant Singh Khalra. It forms part of a longer constitutional history in which cinema has repeatedly become the arena through which difficult questions concerning violence, accountability, nationalism and democratic legitimacy are negotiated.

II. The Colonial Legacy: Why Independent India Inherited Censorship

Independent India did not create film censorship from first principles. The institutional architecture of censorship was inherited almost intact from the colonial state.

The British administration regarded cinema not merely as entertainment but as a medium capable of mobilising anti-colonial sentiment. The Cinematograph Act, 1918 authorised provincial governments to regulate the exhibition of films. Colonial censorship concentrated on three broad themes:

· anti-imperial nationalism;

· criticism of colonial administration;

· representations capable of provoking communal or political mobilisation.

Films sympathetic to the freedom movement, revolutionary organisations or anti-colonial struggles frequently encountered censorship. The objective was not merely to preserve law and order but to maintain imperial legitimacy.

This colonial experience created an institutional paradox.

Although India achieved independence in 1947, the newly independent State retained much of the colonial legal machinery regulating cinema. The Cinematograph Act, 1952 replaced the earlier legislation but preserved the principle that films could be subjected to prior governmental scrutiny before public exhibition.

The constitutional justification, however, changed fundamentally.

Where colonial censorship protected imperial authority, post-independence censorship was officially justified on grounds of public order, national integration, communal harmony and constitutional morality.

Yet the institutional mechanism—preventive certification before exhibition—remained substantially intact.

This continuity has profound constitutional significance.

Independent India rejected colonial political authority but retained one of its principal instruments for regulating public culture.

III. Nation-Building and the Nehruvian State (1947–1964)

The first two decades after Independence were dominated by the enormous task of nation-building. The trauma of Partition, refugee rehabilitation, linguistic reorganisation and economic development shaped governmental priorities. Cinema became an important instrument in constructing a modern, secular and developmental national identity.

The State simultaneously promoted cinema and regulated it.

Institutions such as the Films Division produced documentaries celebrating scientific progress, industrialisation, democratic institutions and national integration. Documentary films were compulsorily screened in theatres for several decades, illustrating the State's belief that cinema could educate citizens as well as entertain them.

At the same time, censorship remained an accepted administrative practice.

Films dealing with communal conflict, Partition violence or sensitive international relations often attracted closer scrutiny. The emphasis during this period, however, generally remained upon preserving national cohesion rather than protecting particular political parties.

This distinction should not be romanticised.

The Nehruvian State also believed that cinema carried social responsibility. The assumption that governments possessed legitimate authority to regulate the moral and political content of films remained largely unquestioned.

Indeed, the Supreme Court's decision in K.A. Abbas v. Union of India (1970) reflected this constitutional understanding by accepting prior certification while insisting that censorship remain constitutionally disciplined.

"Independent India rejected colonial rule but inherited one of its most enduring administrative assumptions—that cinema required prior governmental scrutiny before it could reach citizens."

IV. The Emergency (1975–1977): The Most Visible Crisis of Artistic Freedom

If one period fundamentally altered the relationship between cinema and the State, it was the Emergency proclaimed in June 1975.

The suspension of civil liberties, extensive press censorship and concentration of executive power inevitably affected artistic expression. Although the Emergency lasted only twenty-one months, it left an enduring constitutional memory regarding the dangers of unchecked executive authority.

No episode better illustrates this than the fate of Aandhi. Directed by Gulzar and starring Suchitra Sen and Sanjeev Kumar, the film portrayed a fictional woman politician whose public life and appearance were widely perceived by contemporaries as bearing similarities to then Prime Minister Indira Gandhi. Although the filmmakers denied that the character was intended as a direct biographical representation, the film was withdrawn from circulation during the Emergency and was re-released only after the change of government in 1977.

Even more dramatic was the fate of Kissa Kursi Ka, directed by Amrit Nahata. The film satirised political corruption and authoritarian tendencies. During the Emergency, its master prints were reportedly seized and destroyed. Subsequent proceedings led to one of the most extraordinary episodes in India's legal and political history, symbolising the vulnerability of artistic works when executive power operates without effective constitutional restraint.

The Emergency transformed censorship from an administrative process into an overt instrument of political control. It demonstrated how fragile artistic freedom becomes when constitutional institutions are weakened.

For later generations of constitutional lawyers, the Emergency became the principal historical reminder that formal legality alone cannot safeguard freedom of expression unless accompanied by an independent judiciary, institutional transparency and robust democratic accountability.

V. Liberalisation, Judicial Activism and Expanding Creative Freedom (1991–2014)

The economic liberalisation of the 1990s coincided with a significant evolution in constitutional jurisprudence.

As satellite television, private media and global film distribution expanded, Indian cinema increasingly addressed subjects previously considered politically sensitive.

Several landmark controversies emerged during this period.

Bandit Queen tested judicial willingness to permit disturbing depictions of sexual violence where such depictions served artistic and historical purposes.

Fire generated protests from organisations objecting to its portrayal of same-sex relationships, raising questions concerning morality, majoritarian intolerance and constitutional protection.

Water encountered organised protests during production, illustrating how extra-legal pressure increasingly supplemented formal censorship.

Black Friday, based upon the 1993 Mumbai bomb blasts, experienced prolonged delays while criminal proceedings remained pending.

Final Solution examined the 2002 Gujarat violence and initially encountered restrictions before later receiving certification.

These controversies revealed an important constitutional shift.

Increasingly, courts displayed greater willingness to protect artistic expression, emphasising that disagreement with a film could not automatically justify suppression. The Supreme Court's jurisprudence in S. Rangarajan and Bobby Art International reinforced the principle that the State's constitutional obligation is ordinarily to protect lawful expression rather than capitulate to threats of violence.

VI. The Digital Era and the Politics of Historical Narratives

The rise of OTT platforms after 2015 fundamentally transformed India's cultural landscape. Digital distribution reduced dependence upon theatrical exhibition and created opportunities for filmmakers to explore subjects that might previously have faced commercial or regulatory barriers.

At the same time, historical and political cinema acquired unprecedented prominence. Films and web series depicting Partition, insurgency, religious conflict, terrorism, political leadership and constitutional crises increasingly became subjects of intense public debate.

Works such as The Kashmir Files, The Kerala Story, Emergency, The Sabarmati Report, The Accidental Prime Minister and others have generated sharply divergent responses. Supporters have often argued that such films bring neglected historical experiences into the public domain or challenge what they perceive as established narratives. Critics, by contrast, have contended that some of these works simplify complex historical events, privilege particular political perspectives, or risk reinforcing social and communal polarisation. These debates are part of a broader contest over historical interpretation rather than questions that admit simple factual resolution.

The constitutional issue is therefore distinct from evaluating the historical accuracy of any individual film. Democracies permit competing interpretations of history. The challenge arises when the State appears to facilitate some narratives while restricting others, or when executive intervention creates perceptions of unequal treatment. Such perceptions, whether ultimately justified or not, can influence public confidence in the neutrality of regulatory institutions.

The Satluj controversy thus acquires significance not because it is the first political film to generate disagreement, but because it unfolds within a digital ecosystem where questions of platform governance, executive blocking powers and constitutional transparency have become central to debates over freedom of expression.

VII. Conclusion: From Celluloid to Streaming—The Changing Face of Censorship

The history of film regulation in India reveals both continuity and transformation. Successive governments have confronted the dilemma of balancing artistic freedom with concerns relating to public order, national security, morality and social harmony. The institutional mechanisms have evolved—from colonial licensing, to post-independence certification, to digital platform regulation—but the underlying constitutional tension has remained remarkably consistent.

At the same time, there is an important historical difference. Earlier controversies primarily concerned access to cinema halls and the CBFC's certification process. Contemporary disputes increasingly arise within the domain of digital governance, where executive powers under the Information Technology Act intersect with constitutional guarantees of free expression. This shift alters not only the legal framework but also the speed, scale and opacity with which restrictions may operate.

The Satluj episode therefore represents more than a dispute over one film. It marks another chapter in India's long constitutional conversation about who has the authority to shape public memory, how historical narratives are negotiated in a democracy, and what safeguards are necessary to ensure that freedom of expression remains meaningful in the digital age.

Cinema, Ideology and the Political Economy of Memory: Cultural Power in Contemporary India

"The struggle over cinema is ultimately a struggle over who has the authority to narrate the nation's past."

I. Cinema Beyond Entertainment

Political debates surrounding cinema often proceed from the mistaken assumption that films merely entertain. Modern scholarship in political sociology, cultural studies and media theory demonstrates precisely the opposite. Cinema is among the most influential institutions through which societies imagine themselves, remember their past and negotiate competing visions of the future. It shapes collective emotions, constructs heroes and villains, normalises political values and transforms complex historical events into emotionally intelligible narratives.

Unlike academic history, which ordinarily reaches relatively specialised audiences, cinema operates within mass culture. A two-hour feature film frequently exerts greater influence upon public understanding of historical events than decades of archival research. Consequently, governments, political movements, market actors and civil society organisations all recognise cinema as an important site through which legitimacy is produced and contested.

Political authority therefore extends beyond formal institutions such as legislatures, courts and elections. It also operates through symbolic institutions capable of influencing public consciousness. Cinema has become one of the most significant of these institutions in contemporary democracies.

The controversy surrounding Satluj illustrates this broader dynamic. Public disagreement concerning the film cannot be understood solely as disagreement over one historical narrative. Rather, it reflects competing conceptions of national memory, constitutional accountability and the relationship between State authority and artistic autonomy.

II. Antonio Gramsci and the Politics of Cultural Hegemony

Among twentieth-century political theorists, Antonio Gramsci offered one of the most influential explanations of why governments devote considerable attention to culture.

Gramsci argued that modern States rarely govern through coercion alone. Durable political authority depends upon what he termed cultural hegemony—the ability of dominant institutions to shape common sense, public morality and accepted historical understanding.

Under this framework, schools, newspapers, universities, literature, religious institutions and cinema all become sites where political legitimacy is reproduced.

This insight has significant implications for democratic societies.

Governments do not necessarily need to suppress every dissenting voice. They may instead seek to encourage particular narratives, commemorate selected historical events, celebrate certain political figures and emphasise particular understandings of national identity. At the same time, artists, writers and filmmakers frequently challenge these narratives by foregrounding alternative experiences and neglected histories.

Political cinema therefore becomes a terrain of democratic contestation rather than a simple instrument of propaganda. Different actors—governments, filmmakers, activists, historians, producers and audiences—participate in shaping public memory.

"Power is exercised not only by controlling territory or institutions but also by influencing the stories through which citizens understand their nation."

III. Benedict Anderson: Nations as Imagined Communities

The political scientist Benedict Anderson argued that nations are "imagined communities." Citizens of modern nation-states will never personally know most of their fellow citizens, yet they nevertheless imagine themselves as belonging to a common political community.

This shared imagination is sustained through symbols, commemorations, education, literature and increasingly through visual media.

Cinema contributes significantly to this process because it transforms abstract political ideas into emotionally compelling stories.

Historical films depicting independence movements, wars, constitutional crises, insurgencies, social reform or communal violence inevitably influence how subsequent generations understand national identity.

For this reason, debates concerning historical cinema frequently become debates concerning patriotism, nationalism and citizenship itself.

IV. Maurice Halbwachs, Pierre Nora and Collective Memory

Modern historiography distinguishes between history and collective memory.

Maurice Halbwachs argued that memory is socially constructed rather than individually preserved. Communities continually reinterpret the past in response to contemporary political and cultural circumstances.

Pierre Nora extended this insight through his concept of lieux de mémoire—sites of memory. These include monuments, museums, archives, anniversaries and cultural works that preserve public remembrance when lived memory begins to disappear.

Cinema has become one of the most influential contemporary sites of memory.

Films addressing Partition, the Emergency, insurgencies, communal violence, caste oppression, terrorism or constitutional crises inevitably participate in constructing collective memory.

This explains why disputes surrounding such films often extend far beyond questions of artistic quality.

They concern the ownership of history itself.

V. The Political Economy of Bollywood

A common misconception in public discourse is that the Hindi film industry functions as a single ideological institution. Scholarly research suggests a far more complex picture.

Bollywood is simultaneously:

· an artistic enterprise;

· a commercial industry;

· a cultural institution;

· a global export sector;

· and a participant in public discourse.

Its creative choices are shaped by multiple interacting factors, including:

· audience demand;

· financing structures;

· star power;

· distribution networks;

· censorship frameworks;

· legal regulation;

· technological change;

· streaming platforms;

· and broader political and social climates.

Political films therefore emerge from a complex interaction between market incentives and ideological debates rather than from a single explanatory factor.

For example, the commercial success of films engaging with nationalism, military history, constitutional crises or historical injustice may encourage further investment in similar themes. Equally, films critical of governmental institutions, social hierarchies or historical violence have also attracted audiences and critical acclaim. The relationship between politics and cinema is thus reciprocal rather than unidirectional.

VI. State Patronage, Regulation and Cultural Policy

Every modern State participates in cultural production to some extent. Governments may support cinema through film development corporations, tax incentives, co-production agreements, archival institutions, international film festivals or public broadcasting.

India is no exception. Public institutions have historically funded documentaries, supported regional cinema, preserved film heritage and promoted Indian cinema abroad.

At the same time, regulatory institutions such as the CBFC, broadcasting authorities and digital governance mechanisms inevitably influence the environment in which filmmakers operate.

The constitutional question is not whether the State should play any role in culture. Rather, it concerns the principles governing that role.

Liberal constitutional theory generally accepts public support for culture while insisting that regulation remain content-neutral, transparent and subject to judicial review.

VII. Political Cinema in Contemporary India: Competing Interpretations

The last decade has witnessed a marked increase in films and web series engaging with contemporary political history, national security, religion and constitutional events. Works such as The Kashmir Files, The Kerala Story, Emergency, The Sabarmati Report, The Accidental Prime Minister, Article 370, and Satluj have generated intense public debate.

Scholarly and public responses to these films have varied considerably:

· Some commentators argue that they recover neglected historical experiences, amplify voices previously underrepresented in mainstream discourse, or challenge established narratives.

· Others contend that certain films simplify complex events, foreground particular ideological perspectives, or risk reinforcing political and communal polarisation.

These interpretations are themselves contested. Academic inquiry therefore requires distinguishing between documented facts, judicial findings, artistic choices and political readings. Rather than assigning motives to filmmakers or governments, a constitutional analysis asks whether the legal and institutional framework governing all such films is even-handed, transparent and compatible with freedom of expression.

The Satluj controversy adds another dimension to this debate. Unlike many earlier controversies that focused on certification before theatrical release, it raises questions about the State's role in regulating digital dissemination after publication. This shift from preventive certification to post-publication intervention reflects a broader transformation in the governance of cultural expression.

VIII. The Audience as a Democratic Institution

One of the most important developments in the digital age is the changing role of audiences.

Historically, censorship presumed that governments should decide what citizens ought to see. Contemporary democratic theory increasingly challenges this paternalistic assumption.

Streaming platforms, social media and online criticism have enabled audiences to debate, critique and contextualise films in real time. Citizens are no longer passive recipients of cultural content but active participants in interpreting and contesting historical narratives.

This evolution strengthens the argument that controversial films should ordinarily be met with public debate, scholarly critique and counter-speech rather than suppression, except where restrictions satisfy the strict constitutional requirements laid down under Article 19(2).

IX. Conclusion: Democracy and the Marketplace of Memory

The political economy of cinema demonstrates that films are shaped by a complex interaction of artistic vision, commercial incentives, audience demand, institutional regulation and broader political contexts. Governments, regardless of ideological orientation, have often recognised the symbolic importance of cinema because it contributes to the construction of collective memory and national identity.

The constitutional challenge is therefore not to insulate cinema entirely from politics—a goal that is neither realistic nor historically supported—but to ensure that the legal framework governing artistic expression remains even-handed, transparent and faithful to constitutional guarantees. In a democracy, competing interpretations of history are inevitable. The legitimacy of the constitutional order depends less on achieving consensus than on preserving the conditions under which those interpretations can be freely expressed, debated and critically evaluated.

Satluj, Jaswant Singh Khalra and the Constitutional Politics of Memory

When Human Rights, Historical Truth and Cinematic Expression Converge

"The constitutional significance of Satluj lies not in whether one agrees with its narrative, but in whether a democratic society permits competing narratives of its own history to be publicly examined."**

Every democracy encounters historical events that resist easy closure. Episodes involving insurgency, terrorism, communal violence, enforced disappearances, custodial abuse or extraordinary security operations often leave behind competing narratives that coexist for decades. Governments may emphasise the necessity of exceptional measures undertaken to restore constitutional order. Victims, families, human rights organisations and independent scholars may simultaneously document allegations of abuse committed in the course of those operations. Neither perspective can simply erase the other.

The constitutional challenge therefore extends beyond establishing legal responsibility in individual criminal cases. Democracies must also determine how such histories should be remembered, debated and represented within the public sphere.

Cinema occupies a distinctive place in this process. Unlike judicial decisions, which resolve specific legal disputes, films transform historical events into narratives accessible to a wider public. They inevitably compress chronology, dramatise personalities and employ artistic interpretation. Yet they also perform an important civic function by encouraging public engagement with episodes that might otherwise remain confined to archives and court records.

The controversy surrounding Satluj exemplifies this constitutional dilemma. The film is based upon the life of Jaswant Singh Khalra, a human rights activist whose investigations into alleged illegal cremations during the Punjab insurgency became one of the most consequential human rights episodes in post-Independence India. Before reaching audiences, the film reportedly underwent prolonged certification proceedings, was publicly reported to have faced extensive demands for modifications, and was ultimately released directly on an OTT platform under a different title. Its subsequent withdrawal from Indian streaming services transformed an already sensitive historical narrative into a contemporary constitutional controversy concerning freedom of expression, executive power and the governance of digital media.

Understanding this controversy requires first understanding the historical figure whose life inspired the film.

I. Punjab in the Shadow of Insurgency

The Punjab insurgency of the 1980s and early 1990s constituted one of the most violent internal security challenges faced by the Indian Republic after Independence.

Armed militant groups were responsible for numerous assassinations, bombings, targeted killings and attacks on civilians and public officials. At the same time, the State responded with extensive counter-insurgency operations involving police, paramilitary forces and the armed forces.

Human rights organisations, journalists and later judicial proceedings documented allegations that, alongside lawful security operations, certain officials engaged in unlawful practices including arbitrary detention, custodial torture, enforced disappearances and extra-judicial killings. Government authorities, on the other hand, consistently maintained that security forces were confronting an exceptionally grave insurgency that demanded extraordinary operational responses.

The constitutional significance of this period lies precisely in the coexistence of these two realities. Democratic States possess both the authority and the obligation to combat violent insurgency. Equally, they remain bound by constitutional limitations and the rule of law while doing so. The history of Punjab therefore continues to provoke debate regarding the relationship between national security, accountability and human rights.

II. Jaswant Singh Khalra: Human Rights Activism and Public Accountability

Jaswant Singh Khalra emerged as one of the most prominent figures documenting allegations of illegal cremations during the counter-insurgency period.

Working through documentary research, municipal records and public documentation, he drew attention to cremation registers that appeared to record numerous unidentified bodies cremated by the police without ordinary legal procedures. Khalra argued that these records indicated a pattern requiring independent investigation into possible enforced disappearances and unlawful killings.

His work attracted national and international attention because it challenged official narratives regarding the conduct of counter-insurgency operations. Human rights organisations cited his findings in their advocacy, while governmental authorities disputed broader conclusions concerning the interpretation of the evidence.

In September 1995, Khalra himself disappeared.

Subsequent investigations led to criminal proceedings against several police officials. Courts eventually convicted a number of accused persons in connection with his abduction and murder. These judicial findings established legal responsibility for the offences charged against those individuals and transformed Khalra from an activist documenting alleged disappearances into a victim of a crime that itself became part of India's human rights history.

The legal proceedings occupy a central place in the constitutional narrative because they demonstrate that even within politically sensitive contexts, institutions of criminal justice retained the capacity to investigate and adjudicate allegations involving State officials.

"Jaswant Singh Khalra's legacy rests not only upon what he investigated, but upon the constitutional principle that allegations against public authorities may themselves become matters of legitimate public inquiry."

III. Memory, Human Rights and Transitional Justice

Political theorists studying societies affected by internal conflict frequently employ the concept of transitional justice.

Although India has not formally adopted a transitional justice framework comparable to countries emerging from authoritarian rule or civil war, many of the underlying questions remain relevant.

How should democracies remember periods of political violence?

What obligations do States owe victims and their families?

Can reconciliation occur without public acknowledgment of contested histories?

What role should archives, courts, truth commissions, museums, literature and cinema play in preserving collective memory?

International experience demonstrates that societies answer these questions differently.

South Africa established the Truth and Reconciliation Commission.

Argentina reopened investigations into military-era disappearances.

Germany institutionalised public remembrance of National Socialist crimes.

Latin American democracies have increasingly recognised enforced disappearance as both a legal and historical issue requiring public documentation.

India has followed a different path, relying primarily upon ordinary criminal investigations, commissions of inquiry, judicial proceedings and public debate.

Within this framework, films such as Satluj become part of a broader ecosystem of historical remembrance rather than substitutes for judicial truth.

IV. From Punjab 95 to Satluj: Cinema and Constitutional Controversy

The cinematic journey itself reflects the sensitivity of the subject.

The project was initially announced under one title, later retitled Punjab 95, and eventually released as Satluj.

Public statements by the filmmakers indicate that the project remained before the Central Board of Film Certification for an extended period and that approximately 127 changes were reportedly suggested before certification.

Although the precise legal status and rationale for each suggested modification have not been fully disclosed in the public domain, the reported scale of the proposed changes became a subject of considerable debate within the film community.

Unable to secure a theatrical release under conditions acceptable to the creative team, the film was released directly on an OTT platform.

Its subsequent removal from the Indian catalogue of ZEE5 within days of release shifted public attention from questions concerning film certification to questions concerning digital governance and executive authority under the Information Technology Act.

The constitutional controversy therefore evolved beyond censorship in the traditional sense.

It became a dispute concerning the relationship between executive power, digital intermediaries and the constitutional guarantees of freedom of expression.

V. The Constitutional Question

The central constitutional issue is often misunderstood.

The question is not whether Satluj presents the only legitimate interpretation of Punjab's history.

Nor is it whether every factual or dramatic element contained in the film should be accepted uncritically.

Historical cinema inevitably involves interpretation.

The constitutional question is instead whether executive authorities should ordinarily determine which historically grounded narratives may reach the public.

Liberal constitutionalism generally answers this question by favouring counter-speech over suppression.

Where films contain disputed interpretations, democratic societies ordinarily encourage scholarly criticism, journalistic investigation, public debate and, where appropriate, judicial remedies rather than executive prohibition.

This principle does not eliminate the possibility of restrictions.

Article 19(2) expressly recognises circumstances involving national security, public order and other constitutionally legitimate concerns.

However, constitutional jurisprudence requires that restrictions satisfy standards of legality, necessity, proportionality and procedural fairness.

The legitimacy of any intervention therefore depends not merely upon the seriousness of the governmental objective but equally upon the transparency of the decision-making process and the availability of effective judicial review.

VI. Satluj as a Constitutional Moment

The Satluj controversy represents more than another dispute over a politically sensitive film.

It symbolises a broader constitutional transition.

Earlier debates centred upon the CBFC and theatrical certification.

The present controversy concerns streaming platforms, digital intermediaries, executive blocking powers and the future architecture of online expression.

As media technologies evolve, constitutional safeguards must evolve with them.

If digital governance enables restrictions to occur without the procedural guarantees historically associated with film certification or open judicial scrutiny, then the constitutional balance carefully developed through decades of Supreme Court jurisprudence may require reconsideration.

Conversely, if digital platforms remain entirely immune from constitutional regulation, governments may argue that legitimate concerns relating to national security, incitement or public order become difficult to address.

The constitutional challenge is therefore not to choose between liberty and security.

It is to ensure that the pursuit of one does not unnecessarily erode the other.

VII. Conclusion: From One Film to a Democratic Principle

The constitutional importance of Satluj ultimately lies beyond the fate of a single film. It compels a deeper inquiry into how democratic societies remember difficult histories and how constitutional institutions mediate the relationship between artistic freedom, executive authority and public accountability.

Jaswant Singh Khalra's life entered the historical record through documentation, legal proceedings and public advocacy. Satluj seeks to interpret that history through cinema. Whether audiences ultimately agree or disagree with its interpretation is a matter for democratic debate. The constitutional responsibility of the State, however, is to ensure that restrictions on expression—where they are considered necessary—are imposed within a framework that is lawful, transparent, proportionate and open to independent judicial review.

In that sense, Satluj is not merely a film about one activist or one period of Punjab's history. It is a contemporary test of India's constitutional commitment to freedom of expression in the digital age.

Freedom of Expression, Political Cinema and the Constitutional State

"Constitutional law advances not by copying foreign jurisdictions, but by learning from their experiences while remaining faithful to domestic constitutional values."

I. Why Comparative Constitutional Law Matters

Constitutional adjudication has increasingly become a transnational conversation. Although every Constitution reflects its own historical circumstances, democratic societies frequently confront remarkably similar questions concerning freedom of expression, national security, public order, artistic autonomy and governmental authority. Comparative constitutional law does not seek to transplant foreign legal rules into domestic systems. Rather, it provides analytical frameworks through which constitutional choices may be better understood and critically evaluated.

India's constitutional jurisprudence has long engaged with comparative experience. The framers of the Constitution drew inspiration from multiple constitutional traditions, including the United States, the United Kingdom, Ireland, Canada and Australia, while adapting those principles to India's own social diversity, colonial history and developmental aspirations. The Supreme Court has similarly referred, where appropriate, to foreign judgments in matters involving privacy, dignity, equality, environmental protection and free speech.

The regulation of cinema presents one such area where comparative analysis proves particularly instructive. Every democracy recognises that moving images possess exceptional communicative power. Yet constitutional systems differ substantially in the institutional mechanisms through which they regulate films.

The United States accords cinema the same broad constitutional protection as newspapers and books under the First Amendment. Prior restraints are viewed with profound suspicion, and content-based regulation is subjected to the highest level of judicial scrutiny.

The United Kingdom historically relied upon administrative classification through the British Board of Film Classification, but the incorporation of the European Convention on Human Rights into domestic law strengthened judicial oversight and proportionality review.

Germany places exceptional constitutional emphasis upon human dignity because of the historical experience of National Socialism. Freedom of expression remains strongly protected, but constitutional jurisprudence simultaneously permits carefully circumscribed restrictions where democratic order or the dignity of individuals faces demonstrable threat.

France similarly balances expressive freedom with constitutional commitments to public order and republican values.

Canada employs a Charter-based proportionality analysis, requiring governments to demonstrate that restrictions constitute reasonable limits demonstrably justified in a free and democratic society.

The European Court of Human Rights has developed an extensive body of jurisprudence recognising artistic freedom while allowing States a limited "margin of appreciation" in matters involving morality, public order and cultural sensitivity.

Despite these institutional differences, one principle consistently emerges across mature constitutional democracies: restrictions upon political expression require particularly compelling justification because political speech occupies the highest level of constitutional protection.

This comparative perspective is especially relevant to contemporary India. As digital platforms increasingly replace traditional theatrical exhibition, Indian constitutional law confronts questions similar to those addressed elsewhere: Should governments regulate online films through executive authority? What procedural safeguards are necessary? How should national security claims be evaluated? Can artistic representations of contested history legitimately be restricted? Comparative constitutional experience does not provide automatic answers, but it illuminates the range of democratic responses available.

II. The United States: The First Amendment and the Constitutional Protection of Political Cinema

Among constitutional democracies, the United States has historically adopted the most speech-protective approach to artistic expression. The First Amendment declares that Congress shall make no law abridging the freedom of speech or of the press. Over time, American constitutional doctrine has interpreted this guarantee as extending fully to literature, theatre, newspapers, music and cinema.

This position, however, was not always accepted.

In 1915, the Supreme Court held in Mutual Film Corporation v. Industrial Commission of Ohio that motion pictures were primarily a commercial enterprise and therefore did not enjoy constitutional protection equivalent to that afforded to newspapers. This decision reflected early twentieth-century concerns that films possessed a uniquely powerful influence over public morality and social behaviour.

The constitutional landscape changed dramatically in 1952 with the landmark decision in Joseph Burstyn, Inc. v. Wilson, often known as the "Miracle Decision."

The Court unequivocally rejected its earlier position and recognised that motion pictures are "a significant medium for the communication of ideas." Consequently, films became entitled to First Amendment protection.

The significance of Burstyn extends well beyond American constitutional history.

The judgment acknowledged that cinema combines artistic creativity, political commentary and public education. Because films communicate ideas, governmental suppression based solely upon disagreement with those ideas is constitutionally impermissible.

Subsequent American jurisprudence strengthened this principle through the doctrine of strict scrutiny.

Where governmental action discriminates on the basis of content or viewpoint, courts ordinarily require the government to establish:

1. a compelling governmental interest;

2. a narrowly tailored measure;

3. the least restrictive means of achieving that objective.

Political expression receives the highest constitutional protection because democratic legitimacy depends upon citizens being able to criticise governments, question official narratives and debate matters of public concern.

This doctrine has significant implications for political cinema.

Films addressing wars, governmental misconduct, civil rights, intelligence operations or historical controversies cannot ordinarily be suppressed merely because they generate political disagreement or public discomfort.

III. Prior Restraint: Why American Courts Distrust Preventive Censorship

One of the defining features of American constitutional law is its deep suspicion of prior restraint.

Prior restraint refers to governmental measures preventing publication or exhibition before expression reaches the public.

American constitutional doctrine treats prior restraint as particularly dangerous because it empowers executive authorities to determine what citizens may read, watch or hear before public debate even begins.

This principle was famously articulated in Near v. Minnesota (1931), where the Supreme Court held that prior restraints are presumptively unconstitutional except in the most exceptional circumstances, such as protecting troop movements during wartime or preventing the publication of highly sensitive national security information.

Although Near concerned newspapers rather than films, its constitutional philosophy profoundly influenced later free speech jurisprudence.

The underlying rationale is institutional rather than ideological.

Governments inevitably possess incentives to suppress criticism directed against themselves.

Consequently, constitutional democracies should prefer post-publication accountability, where unlawful speech may be addressed through judicial processes, rather than preventive executive censorship.

This philosophy differs significantly from India's constitutional acceptance of film pre-certification under K.A. Abbas. Nevertheless, the American experience illustrates the democratic value placed upon allowing ideas to enter the public sphere before governmental intervention.

"The First Amendment rests upon a profound constitutional assumption: the remedy for disagreeable ideas is ordinarily more speech, not enforced silence."

IV. National Security, Political Films and Judicial Deference

The American commitment to free speech has never been absolute.

National security, classified information and incitement remain recognised constitutional concerns. Yet even in these areas, judicial scrutiny is often rigorous.

The publication of the Pentagon Papers during the Vietnam War provides a classic illustration. In New York Times Co. v. United States (1971), the federal government sought to prevent newspapers from publishing classified documents relating to the conduct of the war, invoking national security.

The Supreme Court refused to grant the requested injunction.

Although the Court did not deny that national security could, in principle, justify restrictions, it held that the government had failed to meet the extraordinarily heavy burden required to justify prior restraint.

The decision reinforced a foundational democratic proposition: executive assertions of national security are not self-validating. They remain subject to independent judicial examination.

This principle is particularly relevant to contemporary debates surrounding political cinema. It does not imply that all films must be freely exhibited regardless of circumstance. Rather, it underscores that restrictions on political expression require clear legal authority, persuasive justification and effective judicial oversight.

V. Lessons from the American Experience

The American constitutional model cannot be transplanted directly into India. The two constitutional systems differ significantly in text, history and institutional design. Article 19(2) expressly permits reasonable restrictions upon speech, whereas the First Amendment contains no equivalent catalogue of permissible limitations.

Nevertheless, the American experience offers several broader constitutional lessons.

First, cinema should be understood primarily as a medium of expression rather than merely as a commercial activity.

Second, political speech merits heightened constitutional protection because it directly contributes to democratic self-government.

Third, executive restrictions imposed before public debate should be viewed with institutional caution.

Finally, claims of national security, while unquestionably important, should remain subject to meaningful judicial review rather than functioning as conclusive justifications.

These principles do not dictate constitutional outcomes in India. They do, however, reinforce the broader proposition that democratic legitimacy depends not merely upon protecting popular expression but upon safeguarding controversial and politically inconvenient ideas within a framework governed by law.

The American constitutional experience demonstrates one end of the democratic spectrum: a legal order that places exceptional trust in open public discourse and correspondingly subjects governmental restrictions on political expression to the most searching judicial scrutiny.

The United Kingdom: From Administrative Censorship to Human Rights-Based Film Regulation

The British Board of Film Classification, the Human Rights Act and the Principle of Proportionality

"The British experience demonstrates that the legitimacy of film regulation depends less upon the existence of regulatory institutions than upon the constitutional principles governing their exercise."

I. Why the United Kingdom Matters

Among constitutional democracies, the United Kingdom occupies a distinctive position in the history of film regulation. Unlike the United States, which ultimately embraced a robust constitutional doctrine against prior restraint under the First Amendment, Britain developed an administrative model of film censorship that endured for much of the twentieth century. Yet, unlike colonial-era censorship systems that were primarily designed to preserve political authority, the British framework gradually evolved into an institution centred on classification, public accountability and the protection of children rather than the suppression of political dissent.

For India, the British experience possesses particular constitutional significance. The earliest legal architecture of film censorship in colonial India was directly influenced by British administrative practice. The Cinematograph Act of 1918, enacted during colonial rule, drew heavily upon the regulatory philosophy prevailing in Britain. Independent India retained many structural features of this model through the Cinematograph Act, 1952 and the establishment of the Central Board of Film Certification (CBFC).

The constitutional trajectories of the two countries, however, diverged significantly after the enactment of the Human Rights Act, 1998. By incorporating the European Convention on Human Rights into domestic law, the United Kingdom introduced a rights-based framework that increasingly subjected administrative decisions affecting freedom of expression to proportionality review. Film regulation consequently moved away from broad paternalistic censorship towards a model emphasising transparency, reasoned decision-making and judicial oversight.

The British experience therefore offers an important comparative perspective for contemporary India. It illustrates how a State may retain institutional mechanisms for regulating films while simultaneously strengthening constitutional protections for artistic expression.

II. Origins of British Film Regulation

The origins of British film regulation lay not in constitutional law but in local government administration.

During the early twentieth century, concerns regarding morality, obscenity and public order led local authorities to exercise licensing powers over cinema exhibitions. The absence of uniform national standards resulted in considerable inconsistency across different regions.

To address this problem, the film industry itself established the British Board of Film Censors (BBFC) in 1912 as an independent body responsible for examining films before public exhibition.

Although initially created through industry initiative rather than statute, the BBFC gradually acquired nationwide authority because local licensing authorities relied upon its classifications when granting exhibition licences.

This institutional arrangement proved significant.

Rather than operating as a government department, the BBFC functioned as an independent regulatory organisation whose decisions were generally accepted throughout the United Kingdom.

Nevertheless, its early approach reflected prevailing social attitudes.

Films depicting explicit sexuality, excessive violence, blasphemy, political extremism or perceived threats to public morality frequently encountered restrictions.

Like many regulatory institutions of the period, the Board assumed that cinema required active supervision because of its powerful influence upon audiences.

III. From "Censorship" to "Classification"

One of the most important developments in British film regulation has been the gradual transformation of the BBFC's institutional philosophy.

The organisation itself formally changed its name from the British Board of Film Censors to the British Board of Film Classification in 1984.

The change was not merely semantic.

It reflected a broader constitutional and cultural shift.

Rather than viewing its primary responsibility as suppressing undesirable films, the BBFC increasingly emphasised informing audiences, protecting children and enabling informed consumer choice.

Modern British classifications—U, PG, 12A, 15, 18 and R18—primarily indicate age suitability rather than ideological acceptability.

This transformation illustrates a significant normative distinction.

Classification assumes that adults generally possess the autonomy to determine what they wish to watch.

Censorship assumes that the State should decide whether citizens may view particular works at all.

While the BBFC retains authority to require modifications or, in exceptional circumstances, refuse classification, the emphasis has progressively shifted towards facilitating access rather than preventing it.

"The evolution from 'Censors' to 'Classification' symbolised a constitutional transition from State paternalism towards informed individual autonomy."

IV. The Human Rights Act, 1998 and Article 10 of the European Convention

The most significant constitutional development occurred with the enactment of the Human Rights Act, 1998.

Before its enactment, freedom of expression existed primarily as a common law principle supplemented by parliamentary statutes.

The Human Rights Act fundamentally altered this landscape by requiring public authorities—including regulatory bodies—to act consistently with rights protected under the European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR), unless legislation clearly required otherwise.

Article 10 of the Convention provides that:

"Everyone has the right to freedom of expression."

This protection extends to the freedom:

· to hold opinions;

· to receive information;

· to impart ideas without interference by public authority.

Importantly, Article 10 also recognises that freedom of expression carries duties and responsibilities.

Restrictions may therefore be imposed where prescribed by law and necessary in a democratic society for purposes including:

· national security;

· territorial integrity;

· public safety;

· prevention of disorder or crime;

· protection of health or morals;

· protection of the reputation or rights of others;

· preventing disclosure of confidential information;

· maintaining the authority and impartiality of the judiciary.

Unlike the First Amendment, Article 10 expressly contemplates lawful restrictions.

However, those restrictions must satisfy the demanding constitutional standard of necessity in a democratic society.

V. Proportionality: The Central Principle of Modern British Public Law

Perhaps the greatest contribution of modern British constitutional jurisprudence lies in the adoption of proportionality as the principal standard governing restrictions upon fundamental rights.

Prior to the Human Rights Act, judicial review traditionally concentrated upon procedural fairness and administrative legality.

Following incorporation of the Convention, courts increasingly examined whether governmental measures represented proportionate responses to legitimate objectives.

The proportionality analysis ordinarily requires consideration of four questions:

1. Does the measure pursue a legitimate objective?

2. Is the measure rationally connected to that objective?

3. Could the objective be achieved through less restrictive means?

4. Does the measure impose an excessive burden upon the affected right?

This framework differs significantly from traditional administrative review.

Rather than asking merely whether authorities possessed legal power, proportionality requires courts to evaluate the substantive balance between individual liberty and governmental interests.

For artistic expression, this shift has profound constitutional consequences.

Regulators must demonstrate not only that restrictions pursue legitimate aims but also that the chosen measures impair freedom no more than necessary.

VI. Political Films and Democratic Debate

British constitutional culture has generally displayed considerable tolerance towards politically controversial cinema.

Films addressing colonialism, the conflict in Northern Ireland, military intervention, intelligence agencies, immigration and governmental misconduct have ordinarily been permitted, even where they provoked substantial public disagreement.

This approach reflects an important democratic principle.

Political expression occupies a privileged constitutional position because democratic legitimacy depends upon citizens being able to question governmental institutions and historical narratives.

The mere possibility that a film may offend sections of the public does not ordinarily justify suppression.

Instead, public controversy is viewed as an inevitable feature of democratic life.

Restrictions require demonstrable evidence that legal thresholds—such as incitement to violence or serious criminality—have been crossed.

VII. Digital Platforms and Contemporary Regulation

The emergence of streaming services has presented new challenges for British regulators.

Unlike theatrical exhibition, online distribution allows audiences to access films privately, across jurisdictions and without traditional cinema licensing.

Rather than extending prior censorship to the digital environment, Britain has largely encouraged age-classification systems, parental controls and platform responsibility.

Major streaming platforms frequently adopt BBFC age ratings voluntarily, promoting consistency without converting classification into mandatory ideological review.

This approach reflects confidence that informed audiences, supported by transparent classification, generally require less governmental intervention than previously assumed.

VIII. Lessons for India

The British experience offers several important constitutional insights for India.

First, regulatory institutions need not disappear in order to strengthen freedom of expression. Reform can occur by redefining institutional objectives—from censorship towards classification.

Second, transparency is essential. Decisions affecting artistic expression should be accompanied by publicly available reasons capable of judicial scrutiny.

Third, proportionality should become the governing constitutional standard for evaluating restrictions upon films and digital content.

Fourth, regulators should distinguish between protecting children and restricting political expression. Age-based classification is conceptually different from content suppression.

Finally, institutional independence enhances public confidence. A regulator perceived as acting impartially and according to published standards is more likely to command democratic legitimacy than one viewed as operating under executive influence.

These lessons do not imply that India should replicate the British model wholesale. Constitutional arrangements must reflect domestic legal traditions and social conditions. Nevertheless, the British experience demonstrates that film regulation can evolve from paternalistic censorship towards a rights-based framework without abandoning legitimate concerns relating to public order, child protection or national security.

IX. Constitutional evolution of regulation

The constitutional evolution of the United Kingdom illustrates that the legitimacy of film regulation depends not on the existence of regulatory institutions, but on the principles governing their exercise. The transformation of the BBFC from a censoring body into a classification authority, coupled with the Human Rights Act's insistence on legality, transparency and proportionality, reflects a broader shift towards treating audiences as autonomous citizens rather than passive subjects.

For India, where debates continue regarding the role of the CBFC, OTT platforms and executive blocking powers, the British experience offers a valuable comparative lesson. It suggests that constitutional reform need not eliminate regulation altogether. Instead, regulation should be structured to maximise freedom, minimise unnecessary interference and ensure that restrictions are subject to clear legal standards, reasoned justification and effective judicial oversight.

Germany and France: Human Dignity, Constitutional Identity and the Limits of Artistic Freedom

Comparative Constitutional Perspectives on Political Cinema, Public Order and Democratic Memory

"Every constitutional democracy protects freedom of expression, but each defines its limits through the prism of its own historical experience."

I.Why Germany and France Matter

Comparative constitutional analysis reveals that no democratic society regulates freedom of expression in complete isolation from its own history. Constitutional guarantees emerge not merely from abstract political philosophy but from collective historical experiences that shape national understandings of liberty, authority and democratic responsibility. Germany and France illustrate this proposition with particular clarity.

Unlike the United States, where constitutional doctrine is dominated by the First Amendment's deep distrust of governmental regulation of political speech, continental European constitutionalism has developed within a different historical and philosophical tradition. Freedom of expression remains a fundamental democratic right, yet it is understood as operating within a constitutional order that simultaneously protects human dignity, democratic institutions and social cohesion.

For India, these jurisdictions are especially instructive because they demonstrate that constitutional democracies may legitimately regulate certain forms of expression without abandoning their commitment to liberal democracy. The crucial distinction lies not in whether regulation exists, but in whether such regulation is grounded in clear constitutional principles, exercised through independent institutions, and subjected to rigorous judicial review.

The constitutional debate surrounding political cinema in India—including controversies relating to certification, digital regulation and executive intervention—therefore benefits from examining how Germany and France have reconciled freedom of artistic expression with concerns relating to democratic stability, historical responsibility and public order.

II. Germany: Freedom of Expression after National Socialism

The modern German constitutional order cannot be understood without appreciating the profound impact of the National Socialist dictatorship (1933–1945). The experience of authoritarianism, state propaganda, censorship and genocide fundamentally shaped the drafting of the Basic Law (Grundgesetz) in 1949.

Unlike many constitutions that begin by defining governmental institutions, the German Basic Law opens with a moral commitment:

"Human dignity shall be inviolable. To respect and protect it shall be the duty of all state authority."

This declaration in Article 1 is not merely symbolic. The German Federal Constitutional Court has consistently held that human dignity (Menschenwürde) constitutes the foundational principle of the constitutional order. Every exercise of public power must therefore respect this value.

Freedom of expression, protected under Article 5, is correspondingly robust but not absolute. Article 5 guarantees freedom of opinion, freedom of the press, freedom of information and artistic freedom. At the same time, it permits restrictions through general laws, provisions protecting young persons, and the right to personal honour.

The coexistence of Articles 1 and 5 creates a distinctive constitutional balance. Artistic and political expression enjoys strong protection, but it cannot be interpreted in a manner that destroys the constitutional order established to prevent the recurrence of authoritarianism.

III. Militant Democracy (Streitbare Demokratie)

One of Germany's most influential constitutional innovations is the doctrine of militant democracy (streitbare Demokratie).

The framers of the Basic Law concluded that the collapse of the Weimar Republic had occurred partly because democratic institutions tolerated movements committed to destroying democracy itself. Consequently, the post-war Constitution authorised the democratic State to defend itself against organisations that sought to abolish the constitutional order through anti-democratic means.

This principle has influenced laws regulating extremist organisations, political parties and certain forms of expression. For example, public glorification of National Socialism, use of prohibited Nazi symbols, and forms of Holocaust denial may attract criminal sanctions under German law.

These restrictions have frequently been challenged as inconsistent with freedom of expression. The German Federal Constitutional Court has generally upheld them by emphasising Germany's unique constitutional responsibility arising from its historical experience.

The constitutional justification, however, is narrowly framed. Restrictions are not imposed because the State seeks ideological conformity, but because they are regarded as necessary to protect the democratic constitutional order from movements historically associated with its destruction.

"Germany protects freedom of expression by recognising that democracy may, in narrowly defined circumstances, defend itself against forces committed to its abolition."

IV. Human Dignity and Artistic Freedom

Germany's constitutional commitment to artistic freedom has produced a rich body of jurisprudence concerning literature, theatre, visual arts and cinema.

The Federal Constitutional Court has consistently recognised that artistic works often employ exaggeration, symbolism and fictionalisation. Courts therefore distinguish between factual assertions capable of objective verification and artistic interpretation, which necessarily involves imagination and creative licence.

Where artistic expression conflicts with other constitutional values—particularly dignity or personality rights—German courts seek to reconcile these interests through proportionality analysis rather than categorical prohibition.

This approach has significant implications for political cinema.

Films depicting controversial historical events, governmental misconduct or social conflict are ordinarily regarded as protected forms of democratic discourse. Restrictions require careful justification demonstrating that less restrictive alternatives would inadequately protect competing constitutional interests.

 

V. France: Republican Constitutionalism and Freedom of Expression

The French constitutional tradition differs markedly from both Germany and the United States.

Its intellectual foundations lie in the Declaration of the Rights of Man and of the Citizen (1789), which proclaimed freedom of opinion and expression as fundamental rights of citizenship. The French Republic has historically regarded expressive freedom as essential to democratic participation.

At the same time, French constitutionalism attaches exceptional importance to public order (ordre public) and laïcité, the constitutional principle of state secularism.

Public authorities may therefore regulate expression where necessary to preserve public order, prevent serious disorder or protect the rights of others.

French administrative courts have developed sophisticated jurisprudence balancing expressive freedom against these competing constitutional interests.

Unlike systems based upon broad executive discretion, French administrative law generally requires restrictions to satisfy principles of legality, necessity and proportionality.

VI. Laïcité, Public Order and Political Expression

The principle of laïcité reflects France's historical commitment to maintaining institutional neutrality in matters of religion.

Although frequently debated in relation to education and public institutions, it also shapes broader constitutional discussions concerning expression that may affect social cohesion or religious coexistence.

Importantly, French constitutional law does not prohibit criticism of religion or political institutions. Indeed, the Republic has long recognised satire as a legitimate component of democratic culture.

The controversy surrounding the satirical magazine Charlie Hebdo illustrates the complexity of this constitutional commitment. French law has consistently protected the publication's expressive rights despite intense public disagreement and international criticism, emphasising that offensive expression does not automatically lose constitutional protection merely because it shocks or offends sections of society.

At the same time, expression directly inciting hatred, discrimination or violence may legitimately attract legal sanction.

This distinction between offence and incitement occupies a central place in contemporary European free speech jurisprudence.

VII. Cinema, Memory and Historical Responsibility

Both Germany and France have produced films addressing collaboration, occupation, colonialism, terrorism, migration and political violence. Such works often generate vigorous public debate because they revisit painful chapters of national history.

Neither country resolves these controversies by requiring historical consensus. Instead, constitutional institutions generally permit competing interpretations to coexist within the public sphere, subject only to narrowly defined legal limitations.

This approach reflects a broader democratic insight: constitutional legitimacy does not depend upon uniform historical memory but upon preserving institutions through which competing memories may be openly debated.

For India, this observation is particularly relevant. Historical films dealing with Partition, insurgency, communal violence, caste oppression or constitutional crises inevitably generate divergent interpretations. The constitutional objective should not be to eliminate disagreement but to ensure that disagreements unfold within a legal framework consistent with democratic freedoms and the rule of law.

VIII. Comparative Reflections for India

Germany and France demonstrate that strong constitutional protection for expression can coexist with carefully circumscribed regulation. However, three common principles emerge.

First, restrictions must rest upon clear constitutional values, not broad or undefined executive discretion.

Second, independent judicial oversight is indispensable. Administrative authorities do not possess the final word on freedom of expression.

Third, proportionality functions as the principal constitutional safeguard, requiring governments to justify restrictions through reasoned analysis rather than general assertions of public interest.

Applied to the Indian context, these principles reinforce the importance of transparent decision-making under the Cinematograph Act and the Information Technology Act. They also suggest that political cinema, particularly where it addresses matters of public history, should ordinarily receive heightened constitutional protection because it contributes to democratic deliberation rather than merely commercial entertainment.

IX. Constitutional experience from other countries

The constitutional experiences of Germany and France demonstrate that democratic societies may legitimately adopt different institutional arrangements while remaining committed to the protection of expressive freedom. Germany's emphasis on human dignity and the defence of the constitutional order reflects the lessons of authoritarianism. France's commitment to republican values, secularism and public order reflects a different historical trajectory. Yet both jurisdictions converge on a common constitutional principle: restrictions on artistic and political expression must be lawful, proportionate and subject to independent judicial review.

For India, these comparative experiences underscore that the future of film regulation need not be framed as a binary choice between unrestricted expression and comprehensive censorship. A mature constitutional democracy is capable of protecting national security, public order and democratic institutions while simultaneously preserving a broad space for artistic interpretation, historical inquiry and political debate. The challenge lies in designing legal institutions that command public confidence through transparency, reasoned decision-making and fidelity to constitutional values rather than through the exercise of unreviewable executive discretion.

Canada, the ICCPR, UNESCO and the European Court of Human Rights: International Human Rights Standards on Artistic Freedom and Political Expression

Constitutional Proportionality, Cultural Diversity and the Global Protection of Cinema

"Modern constitutional democracies increasingly recognise that artistic freedom is not merely an individual liberty but a public good indispensable to democratic culture."

I. International Constitutionalism and Freedom of Expression

The constitutional regulation of artistic expression no longer operates exclusively within national legal systems. Since the adoption of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights in 1948 and the subsequent development of international human rights law, freedom of expression has acquired a transnational constitutional dimension. International treaties, regional human rights courts and specialised cultural organisations have progressively articulated common principles governing artistic freedom, media pluralism and democratic participation.

These developments have particular significance for India. Although Parliament remains constitutionally sovereign within its legislative sphere and Indian courts are not formally bound by foreign judgments, the Supreme Court has repeatedly recognised that international human rights instruments may illuminate the interpretation of constitutional rights where they are consistent with domestic law. Decisions concerning privacy, environmental protection, gender equality and freedom of expression have frequently drawn upon comparative and international sources to enrich constitutional reasoning.

The regulation of cinema and digital media presents a similar opportunity. Political films increasingly circulate across national borders through streaming platforms, while executive restrictions imposed in one jurisdiction may affect audiences worldwide. Consequently, questions concerning censorship, platform governance and artistic freedom increasingly engage not only domestic constitutional law but also international standards relating to freedom of expression and cultural rights.

This chapter examines four influential sources of international constitutional thought: the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms, the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR), UNESCO's normative framework concerning cultural diversity and artistic freedom, and the jurisprudence of the European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR). Together they provide a coherent normative framework that informs contemporary democratic approaches to political cinema and digital regulation.

II. Canada: The Charter of Rights and the Oakes Test

Canada occupies a distinctive place in comparative constitutional law because it combines robust protection of expressive freedom with a structured doctrine permitting carefully justified limitations. The Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms, enacted in 1982, guarantees freedom of thought, belief, opinion and expression under Section 2(b). Unlike the United States Constitution, however, the Charter expressly recognises in Section 1 that rights may be subject to "such reasonable limits prescribed by law as can be demonstrably justified in a free and democratic society."

This textual architecture has given rise to one of the most influential doctrines in comparative constitutional law: the Oakes Test, established by the Supreme Court of Canada in R. v. Oakes (1986). Whenever the State seeks to justify a limitation on a Charter right, it bears the burden of demonstrating:

1. A pressing and substantial objective: the measure must pursue an objective of sufficient constitutional importance.

2. Rational connection: the restriction must logically advance that objective.

3. Minimal impairment: the State must impair the protected right as little as reasonably possible.

4. Overall proportionality: the benefits of the restriction must outweigh its detrimental impact on the right.

The Oakes Test has become a global reference point for proportionality analysis because it transforms constitutional adjudication into a structured and transparent inquiry rather than a deferential review of executive discretion.

In the context of artistic expression, Canadian courts have generally recognised that films, literature, theatre and visual art contribute to democratic dialogue. Even where restrictions pursue legitimate objectives—such as preventing hate propaganda, protecting children or safeguarding public safety—the State must establish that less restrictive alternatives would not adequately achieve those aims.

For India, the Canadian model is particularly relevant because Article 19(2) similarly contemplates reasonable restrictions. The Canadian experience suggests that the constitutional inquiry should not end once a restriction falls within an enumerated ground; it must also satisfy a rigorous proportionality analysis that evaluates necessity, minimal impairment and the balance between public interest and expressive freedom.

III. The International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR)

The International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR), adopted by the United Nations General Assembly in 1966 and ratified by India in 1979, constitutes the principal international treaty governing civil and political freedoms. Although the Covenant is not self-executing in Indian law, it provides an important interpretive framework for understanding constitutional guarantees.

Article 19 of the ICCPR protects the right to hold opinions without interference and guarantees the freedom to seek, receive and impart information and ideas of all kinds, regardless of frontiers, through any media of one's choice. The reference to "any media" is especially significant in the digital era, as it encompasses traditional print, broadcasting, cinema and contemporary online platforms.

At the same time, Article 19(3) permits restrictions only where they are:

· Provided by law;

· Necessary; and

· Pursued for one of the specified legitimate aims, such as respect for the rights or reputations of others, national security, public order, public health or public morals.

These cumulative requirements establish a high threshold for governmental interference. Restrictions cannot rest on vague executive discretion or broad assertions of public interest; they must be legally prescribed, necessary in a democratic society and proportionate to the objective pursued.

The United Nations Human Rights Committee, in General Comment No. 34 (2011), further clarified that freedom of expression extends fully to political discourse, public affairs, historical debate, artistic expression and commentary on public institutions. The Committee emphasised that restrictions must not jeopardise the essence of the right itself and that States should avoid criminal or administrative measures that suppress legitimate public debate merely because expression is controversial or critical of governmental authority.

This guidance has particular relevance for films addressing historical conflict, insurgency, governmental misconduct or human rights violations. The Committee has repeatedly underscored that democratic societies are characterised by tolerance of disagreement rather than enforced uniformity of opinion.

"International human rights law protects not only agreeable expression but also the artistic and political narratives that challenge official histories and prevailing orthodoxies."

IV. UNESCO and the Protection of Cultural Diversity

While the ICCPR focuses primarily on civil and political rights, UNESCO approaches artistic freedom from the perspective of culture, diversity and creative expression.

The 2005 Convention on the Protection and Promotion of the Diversity of Cultural Expressions recognises that cultural goods and services possess a dual nature: they have economic value, but they also embody identities, values and meanings. Cinema therefore cannot be understood solely as a commercial product; it is simultaneously a vehicle for cultural memory and democratic participation.

UNESCO has consistently maintained that artists must enjoy conditions enabling them to create, produce, distribute and disseminate their works without undue interference. Its reports on artistic freedom emphasise that censorship, intimidation and arbitrary restrictions undermine cultural diversity by narrowing the range of perspectives available within society.

Importantly, UNESCO does not advocate the absence of all regulation. Instead, it encourages regulatory frameworks that are transparent, predictable and consistent with international human rights standards. Public support for cinema, preservation of cultural heritage and age-based classification are all regarded as legitimate aspects of cultural policy, provided they do not become instruments for suppressing political or artistic viewpoints.

For India, UNESCO's perspective is particularly valuable because of the country's extraordinary linguistic, religious and cultural diversity. A constitutional framework that encourages plurality of artistic voices is likely to strengthen rather than weaken democratic cohesion.

V. The European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR)

The European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR) has developed one of the world's most extensive bodies of jurisprudence concerning freedom of expression. Interpreting Article 10 of the European Convention on Human Rights, the Court has repeatedly affirmed that expressive freedom is a cornerstone of democratic society.

A recurring theme in its decisions is that freedom of expression protects not only ideas that are favourably received but also those that "offend, shock or disturb." This principle, articulated in Handyside v. United Kingdom (1976), reflects the understanding that democratic pluralism necessarily entails tolerance of controversial and unpopular speech.

The Court has also recognised, however, that States retain a margin of appreciation in balancing freedom of expression against other legitimate interests. This doctrine acknowledges that national authorities may be better placed to assess local cultural, historical or social circumstances, particularly where no clear European consensus exists. Yet the margin is not unlimited. The Court scrutinises whether restrictions are lawful, pursue legitimate aims and remain proportionate.

In Müller v. Switzerland (1988) and Otto-Preminger-Institut v. Austria (1994), the Court examined artistic works alleged to offend public morals or religious sentiments. While recognising the sensitivity of such matters, it insisted that restrictions be carefully justified and proportionate.

More broadly, ECtHR jurisprudence demonstrates that democratic societies need not eliminate all regulation of artistic expression. Rather, they must ensure that regulation remains exceptional, transparent and compatible with the broader values of pluralism, tolerance and open debate.

VI. International Standards and the Digital Age

The emergence of digital platforms has transformed the practical operation of freedom of expression. Streaming services enable films to reach global audiences instantaneously, while executive blocking orders may remove access across entire jurisdictions. International human rights institutions have therefore increasingly emphasised that restrictions on online content should satisfy the same fundamental principles applicable to traditional media.

Three themes recur across international standards:

1. Legality: restrictions must be based on accessible and precise legal rules.

2. Necessity and proportionality: governments must demonstrate that interference is genuinely required and that less restrictive alternatives would not suffice.

3. Independent oversight: effective judicial or quasi-judicial review is essential to prevent arbitrary or politically motivated decision-making.

These principles have direct relevance for debates concerning the blocking of films on digital platforms. Whether restrictions arise through certification, intermediary regulation or executive direction, the underlying constitutional inquiry remains substantially the same.

VII. Comparative Reflections for India

Taken together, the Canadian Charter, the ICCPR, UNESCO's cultural framework and the jurisprudence of the ECtHR reveal a broad international consensus. Freedom of artistic expression is recognised as an integral component of democratic governance, while restrictions are treated as exceptional measures requiring clear legal authority, compelling justification and independent review.

For India, these comparative standards reinforce rather than replace the constitutional principles already implicit in Articles 19(1)(a) and 19(2). They suggest that future reform should focus less on expanding executive discretion and more on strengthening procedural safeguards, transparency, proportionality and institutional independence. Such reforms would align India's constitutional practice with evolving international standards while remaining faithful to the text and structure of the Constitution.

VIII. No identical mechanism for every nation

International human rights law does not demand that every democracy adopt identical mechanisms for regulating cinema. It does, however, articulate common constitutional values: legality, transparency, proportionality, pluralism and judicial accountability. Canada demonstrates how proportionality can structure constitutional reasoning; the ICCPR establishes universal standards governing expressive freedom; UNESCO highlights the cultural significance of artistic diversity; and the European Court of Human Rights illustrates how democratic societies can accommodate competing interests without abandoning the centrality of free expression.

For India, these sources offer neither binding templates nor foreign prescriptions. Rather, they provide a comparative vocabulary through which domestic constitutional doctrine may continue to evolve in response to the challenges posed by political cinema and digital media. The remaining task is to synthesise these comparative insights into a coherent framework for constitutional reform—an exercise undertaken in the concluding chapter.

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Comparative Lessons for India: Towards a Constitutional Framework for Political Cinema and Digital Expression

Learning from Comparative Constitutional Practice without Losing India's Constitutional Identity

"Comparative constitutional law does not ask India to imitate other democracies. It asks whether India's constitutional commitments to liberty, dignity, democracy and the rule of law can be realised more effectively by learning from their experiences."

I. Introduction: From Comparative Study to Constitutional Synthesis

The preceding comparative chapters have examined the constitutional regulation of artistic and political expression across several democratic jurisdictions. The United States illustrates the constitutional preference for open public discourse and profound scepticism towards prior restraints. The United Kingdom demonstrates the gradual transformation of film regulation from administrative censorship to rights-based classification under the Human Rights Act. Germany and France reveal that strong constitutional protection of expression may coexist with carefully structured limitations grounded in human dignity, constitutional identity and public order. Canada contributes a sophisticated proportionality framework, while the ICCPR, UNESCO and the European Court of Human Rights articulate internationally accepted standards concerning legality, necessity, transparency and democratic pluralism.

The objective of comparative constitutional inquiry is not to identify an ideal foreign model for transplantation into Indian law. Constitutional systems emerge from distinct historical experiences and reflect differing institutional arrangements. India's constitutional framework, shaped by Partition, linguistic diversity, religious pluralism, colonial experience and developmental aspirations, cannot simply replicate the constitutional doctrines of another jurisdiction.

Nevertheless, comparative analysis performs an indispensable analytical function. It illuminates the constitutional values that democratic societies commonly regard as essential while simultaneously revealing the institutional mechanisms through which those values are protected. The comparative inquiry undertaken in this study demonstrates that despite significant differences in legal traditions, mature constitutional democracies increasingly converge upon certain foundational principles governing restrictions on artistic and political expression.

These principles include legality, institutional independence, proportionality, transparency, judicial review and a presumption in favour of expression. They neither eliminate governmental regulation nor deny the legitimacy of concerns relating to national security, public order or the protection of vulnerable groups. Rather, they require that restrictions be carefully justified within a constitutional framework that preserves democratic accountability.

The question before India is therefore not whether cinema should remain subject to regulation. Every democratic society regulates expression in some form. The constitutional question is whether India's regulatory framework sufficiently protects freedom of artistic expression while enabling the State to pursue legitimate constitutional objectives through lawful, transparent and proportionate means.

II. The Indian Constitutional Model: Strengths and Structural Weaknesses

India's constitutional framework possesses significant strengths. Article 19(1)(a) guarantees freedom of speech and expression, while Article 19(2) recognises that this freedom may be reasonably restricted in the interests of sovereignty and integrity, security of the State, friendly relations with foreign States, public order, decency or morality, contempt of court, defamation and incitement to an offence.

The Supreme Court has repeatedly affirmed that freedom of expression occupies a preferred position within the constitutional order. Decisions such as K.A. Abbas v. Union of India, S. Rangarajan v. P. Jagjivan Ram, Bobby Art International v. Om Pal Singh Hoon, Shreya Singhal v. Union of India and Anuradha Bhasin v. Union of India have progressively strengthened constitutional safeguards against arbitrary restrictions.

At the same time, the comparative study reveals several structural weaknesses.

First, India continues to retain a system of prior certification for theatrical films. Although upheld in K.A. Abbas, this model emerged in an era when cinema constituted the dominant mass medium and digital platforms did not exist. Contemporary technological developments raise legitimate questions regarding whether preventive certification remains constitutionally justified in its present form.

Secondly, the legal architecture governing digital platforms remains fragmented. While theatrical films are regulated through the Cinematograph Act, online content may be affected by the Information Technology Act, intermediary liability provisions and executive blocking powers. The absence of a unified legislative framework creates uncertainty for creators, platforms and audiences alike.

Thirdly, executive decision-making frequently operates through procedures that are not fully transparent. Confidential directions, limited disclosure of reasons and restricted opportunities for meaningful review risk undermining public confidence in regulatory institutions.

Finally, delays in certification and inconsistent regulatory practices may themselves operate as indirect restraints upon artistic expression. In constitutional terms, prolonged uncertainty can be as burdensome as explicit prohibition.

III. The Principle of Legality

A recurring theme across all comparative jurisdictions is the centrality of legality.

Restrictions upon expression must not depend upon broad administrative discretion or informal governmental expectations. They must instead rest upon clearly articulated statutory authority capable of independent judicial interpretation.

In the Indian context, this principle requires that regulatory powers affecting cinema and digital platforms be exercised strictly within the limits prescribed by legislation.

Where statutory language permits multiple interpretations, the interpretation that most effectively preserves constitutional freedom should ordinarily be preferred.

Legality also demands accessibility and predictability. Artists, producers and digital platforms should be able to ascertain in advance the legal standards governing their work. Uncertainty encourages self-censorship and undermines democratic discourse.

IV. Transparency and Reasoned Decision-Making

Comparative constitutional practice demonstrates that transparency is indispensable to legitimate regulation.

Whether restrictions arise through certification, classification or digital blocking, democratic accountability requires publication of reasons, disclosure of applicable standards and opportunities for affected parties to challenge adverse decisions.

Transparency performs several constitutional functions.

It disciplines administrative discretion.

It facilitates judicial review.

It enables informed public debate.

It strengthens institutional legitimacy.

Where decisions affecting expression remain confidential, meaningful constitutional scrutiny becomes considerably more difficult.

This principle has particular significance for digital governance. If executive directions to online intermediaries remain inaccessible to affected individuals and the public, constitutional guarantees risk becoming difficult to enforce in practice.

"In constitutional democracies, transparency is not merely an administrative virtue; it is a safeguard against arbitrary power."

V. Proportionality as the Governing Constitutional Standard

Perhaps the most significant lesson emerging from comparative constitutional law is the centrality of proportionality.

Although articulated differently across jurisdictions, proportionality requires governments to demonstrate:

· a legitimate constitutional objective;

· a rational connection between the measure and that objective;

· the absence of less restrictive alternatives;

· an appropriate balance between competing constitutional interests.

Indian constitutional jurisprudence has increasingly embraced proportionality, particularly in cases involving privacy, personal liberty and freedom of expression.

The regulation of cinema and digital media should similarly be guided by proportionality rather than broad assertions of administrative necessity.

This does not eliminate governmental authority.

It instead ensures that restrictions impair expressive freedom no more than reasonably required.

VI. Institutional Independence

Comparative experience consistently demonstrates that institutional design influences public confidence.

Independent regulatory bodies are more likely to command legitimacy than institutions perceived as subject to direct political control.

This observation does not imply that regulatory authorities should operate without democratic accountability.

Rather, it suggests that appointments, procedures and decision-making processes should minimise actual and perceived political influence.

For India, strengthening the functional independence of film certification and digital regulatory institutions would enhance constitutional credibility while preserving governmental oversight through legislation and judicial review.

VII. Political Cinema and Democratic Accountability

Political films occupy a distinctive constitutional position because they contribute directly to democratic deliberation.

Films depicting historical conflicts, governmental policies, constitutional crises or social movements inevitably generate disagreement.

Comparative constitutional experience suggests that disagreement alone cannot justify suppression.

Instead, democratic societies ordinarily prefer public debate, academic criticism, journalistic scrutiny and judicial remedies over executive prohibition.

Applied to India, this principle reinforces the observation made throughout this study: the constitutional legitimacy of political cinema should ordinarily be assessed not by whether it supports or criticises governmental narratives, but by whether any restriction upon it satisfies the constitutional standards of legality, necessity and proportionality.

VIII. Not a ready made solution

Comparative constitutional law does not provide ready-made solutions for India's complex constitutional questions. It does, however, reveal a broad democratic consensus. Across jurisdictions with diverse histories and institutional arrangements, restrictions on artistic and political expression are increasingly expected to satisfy common constitutional standards: legality, transparency, proportionality, institutional independence and effective judicial review.

These principles are not foreign to the Indian Constitution. They are already implicit in Articles 14, 19 and 21, and have been progressively developed through judicial interpretation. The challenge for contemporary India is therefore not to import external constitutional doctrines, but to deepen and operationalise these values within its own legal framework.

The Satluj controversy illustrates that the constitutional questions confronting India are no longer confined to theatrical exhibition. They extend to digital platforms, executive governance, historical memory and the evolving relationship between freedom of expression and democratic accountability. Comparative constitutional experience suggests that the most durable response lies not in expanding censorship nor in abolishing regulation altogether, but in constructing a regulatory framework that remains faithful to constitutional liberty while preserving the legitimate interests of the democratic State.

Towards a Constitutional Framework for Political Cinema in India: Conclusions and Reform Agenda

Reimagining Film Regulation in the Age of Digital Constitutionalism

"A constitutional democracy demonstrates its confidence not by suppressing difficult histories, but by permitting them to be examined, debated and, where necessary, contested through the institutions of public reason."

I.Beyond the Satluj Controversy

The controversy surrounding Satluj has served throughout this study as a constitutional lens through which broader questions concerning freedom of expression, executive authority, historical memory and digital governance have been examined. Yet the significance of this controversy extends well beyond the fate of a single film or the circumstances surrounding its release. It illustrates the profound constitutional challenges confronting democratic societies in an era where political narratives increasingly circulate through digital platforms rather than traditional theatres.

The preceding chapters have demonstrated that debates over political cinema are not unique to India. Every constitutional democracy has struggled to reconcile artistic freedom with concerns relating to national security, public order, social cohesion and the protection of vulnerable groups. Comparative constitutional experience reveals no universally applicable institutional model. The United States accords exceptional protection to political speech under the First Amendment. The United Kingdom has transformed administrative censorship into a system centred on classification and proportionality. Germany and France have developed constitutional doctrines shaped by historical responsibility, human dignity and republican values. Canada, the ICCPR, UNESCO and the jurisprudence of the European Court of Human Rights collectively reinforce a global consensus that restrictions upon artistic expression must satisfy the requirements of legality, necessity, proportionality and effective judicial oversight.

India's constitutional framework already embodies these values. Articles 14, 19 and 21 of the Constitution, together with decades of Supreme Court jurisprudence, provide a robust normative foundation for protecting artistic and political expression. The challenge lies not in discovering new constitutional principles but in adapting existing guarantees to the realities of twenty-first century communication technologies.

The Satluj episode therefore should not be viewed merely as a dispute concerning film certification or digital streaming. It represents a constitutional moment inviting reconsideration of how democratic institutions regulate political cinema, historical narratives and online expression. The central argument advanced in this study is that India need not choose between unrestricted expression and pervasive censorship. The Constitution instead points towards a middle path grounded in democratic accountability, transparency, proportionality and institutional independence.

II. The Constitutional Transformation of Film Regulation

The evolution of cinema from theatrical exhibition to global digital streaming requires a corresponding transformation in constitutional thinking.

The legal architecture established by the Cinematograph Act, 1952 emerged during an era in which films were exhibited almost exclusively in licensed theatres. The assumptions underlying preventive certification were shaped by technological scarcity, limited distribution channels and the exceptional influence attributed to cinema in the mid-twentieth century.

The digital environment has fundamentally altered these assumptions.

Streaming platforms provide personalised access rather than compulsory public exhibition. Audiences increasingly exercise individual choice through age controls, parental supervision and subscription-based services. The distinction between cinema, documentary, television programming and online audiovisual content has become increasingly blurred.

These developments suggest that constitutional regulation should evolve from a framework primarily concerned with preventive censorship towards one centred on classification, informed choice and post-publication accountability.

This does not require abandoning regulation. Rather, it requires redefining the objectives of regulation in light of technological change.

III. Guiding Constitutional Principles

Any future framework governing political cinema should be guided by six constitutional principles.

(a) Freedom as the Constitutional Default

The presumption in every case should favour exhibition. Restrictions should constitute the exception rather than the rule and must always be justified by the State.

(b) Legality

Every restriction upon artistic expression must rest upon clear statutory authority. Informal executive practices or unpublished standards should have no place in constitutional governance.

(c) Transparency

Orders affecting the circulation of films, whether through certification or digital blocking, should ordinarily be reasoned and publicly available, subject only to narrowly tailored exceptions where disclosure would itself demonstrably compromise national security.

(d) Proportionality

Authorities should evaluate whether the least restrictive means are available. Age classification, content advisories, disclaimers or targeted editing may, in many cases, adequately protect legitimate public interests without preventing access altogether.

(e) Judicial Review

Meaningful access to independent judicial scrutiny must remain available. Executive decisions affecting political expression should never acquire practical finality merely because legal proceedings are prolonged or opaque.

(f) Institutional Independence

Regulatory institutions should function with professional autonomy, insulated from partisan influence while remaining accountable to Parliament and the Constitution.

"The constitutional question is not whether governments may regulate films; it is whether regulation itself remains subject to constitutional discipline."

IV. Legislative Reform Agenda

The comparative analysis undertaken in this study suggests that several legislative reforms merit serious consideration.

1. Reorienting the Cinematograph Act

The statutory objective should shift from "certification through excision" towards classification based upon age suitability and informed audience choice. Refusal of exhibition should be reserved for the narrowest category of cases falling squarely within constitutionally permissible restrictions under Article 19(2).

2. Harmonising Digital and Theatrical Regulation

The present fragmentation between theatrical certification and digital governance creates uncertainty. Parliament may consider enacting a unified legislative framework that distinguishes clearly between age classification, platform responsibilities and exceptional blocking powers while ensuring consistent constitutional safeguards across all forms of audiovisual expression.

3. Transparency in Blocking Orders

Where films or audiovisual works are blocked under statutory authority, the reasons should ordinarily be published, except where disclosure would itself demonstrably prejudice national security or ongoing criminal investigations. Even in such exceptional cases, an independent reviewing authority should have access to the complete record.

4. Statutory Time Limits

Certification, review and appellate processes should be completed within fixed statutory periods. Administrative delay should not operate as an indirect restraint upon artistic freedom.

5. Periodic Parliamentary Review

Legislation governing digital expression should be reviewed periodically by Parliament to ensure that regulatory powers remain proportionate in light of technological developments and constitutional jurisprudence.

V. Institutional Reform

Legislation alone cannot secure constitutional freedom. Institutional design is equally important.

The Central Board of Film Certification should continue to function as a specialised expert body, but its composition should reflect greater diversity of expertise. In addition to representatives from the film industry, membership should include constitutional lawyers, child psychologists, historians, scholars of media studies and experts in digital communication.

Appointments should be made through transparent procedures with clearly defined qualifications and fixed tenures to strengthen public confidence in the Board's independence.

Similarly, where executive authorities exercise powers affecting online audiovisual content, structured internal review and external judicial oversight should be embedded within the decision-making process.

VI. Political Cinema and Constitutional Democracy

Political films perform a distinctive constitutional function.

Unlike purely commercial entertainment, they often engage directly with constitutional values, public institutions, historical memory and democratic accountability. Their social value therefore cannot be assessed solely through the lens of commercial success or audience preference.

Democratic societies benefit when competing historical narratives remain open to scholarly criticism, journalistic investigation and public debate. Governments possess neither constitutional monopoly over historical truth nor exclusive authority to determine legitimate political memory.

At the same time, artistic freedom carries responsibilities. Filmmakers should exercise due diligence in representing historical events, distinguish clearly between documented fact and dramatic interpretation where appropriate, and avoid expression that directly incites violence or unlawful conduct. These responsibilities, however, should ordinarily be enforced through the ordinary processes of law rather than through expansive systems of preventive suppression.

VII. A Proposed Constitutional Framework for Political Cinema

Drawing upon Indian constitutional doctrine and comparative democratic practice, this study proposes the following normative framework for regulating political cinema:

1. Presumption in favour of exhibition: Political and historical films should ordinarily be available for public viewing unless restrictions are demonstrably justified under Article 19(2).

2. Content neutrality: Regulatory decisions should not depend upon whether a film supports or criticises the policies of any government, political party or ideological movement.

3. Preference for classification over excision: Wherever possible, age ratings, advisories or contextual disclaimers should be preferred to mandatory cuts.

4. Structured proportionality review: Every restrictive measure should satisfy the tests of legitimacy, rational connection, necessity and overall balance.

5. Transparency and reasoned orders: Decisions affecting expressive freedom should ordinarily be accompanied by published reasons.

6. Independent and time-bound appellate review: Challenges to certification or blocking decisions should be decided expeditiously by an independent forum.

7. Technological neutrality: Comparable constitutional standards should govern theatrical films, streaming platforms and future forms of audiovisual communication.

These principles are not presented as statements of existing law. They constitute a normative framework intended to stimulate scholarly debate and inform future legislative and judicial development.

VIII. Re-reading the Satluj Controversy

Viewed against the constitutional framework developed in this study, the Satluj controversy assumes broader significance. It illustrates the tensions that arise when political cinema intersects with executive regulation in the digital age. The controversy does not establish that every restriction is unconstitutional, nor does it imply that governments lack authority to protect national security or public order. Rather, it underscores the importance of ensuring that any interference with artistic expression is lawful, transparent, proportionate and subject to effective review.

In this sense, Satluj should be understood not merely as a dispute over a particular film but as a constitutional case study exposing the need to modernise India's legal architecture for regulating audiovisual expression.

IX. Conclusion

The history of constitutional democracies demonstrates that freedom of expression is tested most severely not by speech that enjoys widespread approval, but by expression that provokes disagreement, discomfort or political controversy. Cinema, because of its unique capacity to combine historical narrative, artistic imagination and public persuasion, occupies a particularly sensitive position within this constitutional landscape.

India's constitutional tradition has long recognised that democracy depends upon informed public debate rather than enforced ideological conformity. The Supreme Court has repeatedly affirmed that freedom of expression protects not only popular opinions but also those capable of unsettling established assumptions. Comparative constitutional experience reinforces this understanding by demonstrating that mature democracies increasingly regulate artistic expression through principles of legality, transparency, proportionality and judicial accountability rather than through broad executive discretion.

The constitutional challenge presented by Satluj is therefore neither unique nor insurmountable. It invites India to reconsider whether legal institutions designed for the age of theatrical exhibition remain adequate for an era of digital communication and global streaming platforms. The answer, this study suggests, lies not in abandoning regulation altogether but in reshaping it so that constitutional liberty remains the organising principle and governmental restriction the carefully justified exception.

Ultimately, the resilience of a constitutional democracy is measured not by its capacity to silence contested narratives, but by its confidence in allowing those narratives to enter the public sphere, where they may be evaluated through reason, evidence, scholarship and democratic debate. A constitutional order that protects this space affirms not only the freedom of artists but also the maturity of the Republic itself.

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