Monday, May 6, 2024
ADVT 
National

Canadian Police Rap Deepa Mehta's Film For Glamourising Gangsters' Lifestyle In Indo-Canadian Youth

Darpan News Desk IANS, 03 Oct, 2015 12:08 PM
    The Canadian police have criticised the glamourisation of local gang-lifestyle in Indo-Canadian director Deepa Mehta's new movie "Beeba Boys", a media report said.
     
    Sergeant Lindsey Houghton from the Combined Forces Special Enforcement Unit of British Columbia and Abbotsford Police spokesperson constable Ian MacDonald were invited to a special screening of the movie in Vancouver recently.
     
    After watching the movie, their reaction was that it gives a wrong impression about the realities of the gang-lifestyle in the region and were worried about the negative effect it could have on Indo-Canadian youth, news release reported on Friday.
     
     
    "It is not all money and cars and drugs all the time and going out and partying. It is paranoia, it is fear, it is constantly looking over your shoulder for your friends, your enemies, for the police," Houghton was quoted as saying.
     
    Houghton said that his concern is about the over-glorification of the gang lifestyle.
     
    "My concern is that the South Asian community has worked unbelievably hard over the last decade and been so proactive to try and fight these stereotypes and we have worked very hard along with them to try and help them with that and vice versa. And my concern is that a movie like this will set those efforts back," he added.
     
    According to Houghton, perhaps Mehta did not want to have an accurate portrayal as a movie maker because "sometimes telling the truth or showing the truth might not sell."
     
     
    Houghton also decried the use of the "kirpan" (a short sword or knife worn by religious Sikhs) in one of the scenes to cut a guy's throat.
     
    MacDonald, however, said the movie was watchable and was properly edited.
     
    "The issues that I have are with the content and regrettably I was struggling to find any positive South Asian characters in the movie. I thought there were a lot of potentials for the film that just were not realised."
     
    "[The movie] is not a very accurate portrayal of what it is to be a gangster. They missed a lot of the loneliness, the inherent boredom and fear, and the fact that many times and in almost every environment (the gangsters) are basically social pariahs," MacDonald pointed out.
     
     
    Houghton and MacDonald have provided a wealth of expert analysis on gangs over the past years.
     
    The movie will be released across Canada on October 16.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    If Monster Trade Deal Is Reached, Canada Will Release Details, Harper Says

    If Monster Trade Deal Is Reached, Canada Will Release Details, Harper Says
    It sounds like an agreement on the Trans-Pacific Partnership is close — and when it's done, Conservative Leader Stephen Harper says he intends to disclose the details of what he's billing as the largest trade deal in history.

    If Monster Trade Deal Is Reached, Canada Will Release Details, Harper Says

    3 Dead, At Least 15 Injured In Serious Multi-vehicle Crash On Highway 401 At Whitby, Ont.

    3 Dead, At Least 15 Injured In Serious Multi-vehicle Crash On Highway 401 At Whitby, Ont.
    A man, a woman and a boy died in the pileup and as many as 20 vehicles, including four tractor-trailer trucks, were involved in the collision in the westbound lanes of the highway

    3 Dead, At Least 15 Injured In Serious Multi-vehicle Crash On Highway 401 At Whitby, Ont.

    Golden Tree Statue Installed In Memory Of 3 Indo-Canadian Farmworkers Killed In Abbotsford Van Crash

    Golden Tree Statue Installed In Memory Of 3 Indo-Canadian Farmworkers Killed In Abbotsford Van Crash
    31-year-old Sarbjit Kaur Sidhu, 52-year-old Amarjit Kaur Bal and 46-year-old Sukhvider Kaur Punia were killed in March 2007 when a van struck a concrete median on Highway 1 near Abbotsford

    Golden Tree Statue Installed In Memory Of 3 Indo-Canadian Farmworkers Killed In Abbotsford Van Crash

    Howard Richmond, Ontario Soldier Who Killed His Wife Not Criminally Responsible For Murder: Defence

    Howard Richmond, Ontario Soldier Who Killed His Wife Not Criminally Responsible For Murder: Defence
    The trial of a Canadian soldier who killed his wife, but says he's not criminally responsible, heard from a restaurant employee Friday who spotted the victim's vehicle after she was reported missing.

    Howard Richmond, Ontario Soldier Who Killed His Wife Not Criminally Responsible For Murder: Defence

    TPP: Negotiators Close In On Auto Deal, Approaching 12-Country Trade Pact

    TPP: Negotiators Close In On Auto Deal, Approaching 12-Country Trade Pact
    Details have filtered out to stakeholder groups gathered in Atlanta for negotiations toward a 12-country trade pact.

    TPP: Negotiators Close In On Auto Deal, Approaching 12-Country Trade Pact

    Northern Gateway Talks Excluded Question Of First Nations' Governance Rights

    Northern Gateway Talks Excluded Question Of First Nations' Governance Rights
    Lawyer Cheryl Sharvit says the Nadleh Whut'en and Nak'azdli are not asserting the right to veto resource projects on traditional territories in British Columbia's Central Interior.

    Northern Gateway Talks Excluded Question Of First Nations' Governance Rights