Tan’s Uncut List of Fine Singaporean Incisions
Namita Malhotra
Royston Tan’s film Cut is a highly acclaimed short film on
censorship that was made in defiance of the 27 cuts that
Tan’s previous film 15 was subjected to. In this short
satirical musical, a censor board official in Singapore meets
her biggest fan in the supermarket. The fan goes into a
rhapsody over the sheer artistry and brilliance of her cuts
that have changed the narratives of remarkably violent
and/or sexual films like Swimming Pool, Hong Kong’s Purple
Storm, Scratch, and, Intimacy, to benign films that resemble
sappy greeting cards.
Debates around censorship are often configured between
the State and the film maker, overlooking the ubiquitous
censor board official, and this short film brings to the
forefront the figure of the censor board official, her or his
tastes, interests and facets of her personality. When Tan’s
film 15 was subjected to the surgical trauma of multiple
cuts by the censor board, Tan made Cut – a vicious stab
at the Singapore censorship regime, which is brilliantly
ironical and funny.
A censorship regime necessarily implies that a small group
of people, whether smirking judges, rule-making legislators
or fastidious censor board officials can determine what the
public can watch. Tan’s film plays with the idea of the fantasy
of the regulatory authorities to be adored and appreciated
for their work. In a world where the film makers are creative
rebels, the iconoclasts, and the brilliant visionaries, how
come we don’t notice the ubiquitous spectacled censor
board official watching films with a hungry passion and a
ready scissor to do snippety snip with, while still keeping a
coherent narrative?
The chance meeting between the uptight official and the
geeky fan begins with the fan exclaiming – ‘You know,
I’m your biggest fan. I know every cut you’ve made in the
history of cinema.’ This short film uses contemporary pop
songs and ballads, like Thank you for the music (Thank you
to the censors), and is packed with kitschy dance numbers.
The fan then proceeds to list a remarkably long list of cuts.
‘There were two cuts in Titanic, two in Swimming Pool, one
in City of God, and the most important scene was cut in Y tu
mama tambien….’ and the seemingly never ending list goes
on and on
Tan’s list of fine incisions made by the Singaporean
censorship authorities, has the sheer fantastical quality of
Borges’ list of animals found in a Chinese encyclopedia,
that include animals that are ‘i) frenzied, j) innumerable, k)
drawn with a very fine camel hair brush’ and oddly would
never belong together, and only meet in the space of the
making of such a list, or as Foucault says, in the non-space
of language.
One of the particularly arch comments made to the stoic
censor board official in Cut is about her cuts in Chicago
to remove references to pussy in the songs, and how the
censor board ‘took on a new challenge to display their
musical skills, and even Andrew Lloyd Webber cannot reedit
his songs the way you can’. And, of course, to ask,
whether her husband is also cut.
An obvious parallel in the Indian context is the 21 cuts that
Anand Patwardhan was asked to make by the Central Board
of Film Certification (CBFC) in his film War and Peace. The
list contains scenes like:-
Cut 1 ‘Delete the visuals of Gandhiji being shot by
Nathuram Godse’
Cut 5 ‘Delete the commentary “BJP is faced with growing
criticism” ’
Cut 7 ‘Delete the entire sequence, visuals and dialogues
spoken by dalit leaders including all references to Lord
Buddha’
Cut 8 ‘Delete the reference to BJP uttered by villager’
Cut 11 ‘Delete the visual of ‘Hindu rath’
Cut 21. GENERAL CUT ‘Delete the entire visuals and
dialogues of all political leaders, including President,
Prime Minister and Ministers’
Though Cut seems relevant to most countries where there
is a censorship regime, it is particularly relevant in India,
because of the existence of pre-censorship of cinema, in
contrast to either television or books. In Cut, the bewildered
fan asks of the censor board official – ‘But who looks after
your moral welfare. How do you resist the temptation to
become a call girl, when you watch the uncut version of
Chicago, a drug addict when you watch Trainspotting or
a lesbian after Boys don’t Cry, or a serial killer when you
watch the Japanese film Battle Royale.’
Inspite of the fact that Tan’s film is a vitriolic response
to the regime in Singapore, it actually makes a far more
complicated argument about censorship than the accepted
model of viewing it as a prohibition on freedom of speech
and expression. Annette Kuhn’s work on censorship makes
the argument that to look at censorship as a prohibitive
gesture of power, ‘does not go far enough, and may actually
inhibit our understanding of how, and with what effects, the
powers involved in film censorship work’. A prohibition/
institutions model of viewing censorship does not allow
us to see that the law is not just interested in prohibiting
a certain kind of seeing, but also equally interested in
suggesting a proper way of seeing. Censorship has to be
understood as power that emerges in concrete sets of
relations, rather than an institutional privilege. Thus, in
this case, it is far more useful to view censorship not so
much as the imposition of rules on a pre-constituted entity
(a cinematographic film), but as an ongoing process of
constituting objects from and for its own practices.
Kuhn’s work on the productive discourse of censorship
and Foucault’s work on re-conceptualising power provides
a way to look at censorship not in terms of prohibition or
erasure, but that censorship depends on the production of
a range of effects. One instance is the creation of the ideal
viewer who has to be discursively crafted. All regulatory
fantasies of censorship authorities are played out with
this imaginary viewer in mind, with the State adopting
many roles, of Benevolent Daddies protecting an infantile
vulnerable viewer (parens patriae), of avuncular authorities
investigating the nature of the viewer, or as Nurturing
Nannies (as Tan’s film describes) trying to circumscribe
the world that the viewer is exposed to. In the end, the
abstract viewer in law and policy, is mostly mobilised as a
category of regulation. The abstract viewer is made more
intelligible through legal and juridical discourses that allow
for classification and administration of the public/viewer
by regulatory authorities. It is perhaps ironical that it is the
legal and juridical fantasy of sexual deviance, violence, and
depravity that would result from the untrammelled flow
of cinema, is what allows for the creation of the precise
fantasy of disciplined public in a theatre watching films in
an orderly fashion.
Kuhn’s argument is that censorship is often viewed as a
blackening out of moments that can then not reach the
viewer, but that instead we should find discursive modes to
talk about film censorship that takes into account allegedly
diverse phenomena. Tan’s film is one way of finding a
discursive mode to talk about film censorship that takes
into account the State-produced discourse around nation
building, moral panics around sexuality, spatial anxieties
over exhibition and theatre spaces, legal dilemmas around
piracy and copyright. Cut absurdly invests the process of
censorship with creativity, and instead of erasure through
censorship, in fact, makes it seem as if a wholly different
film is possible. The fan exclaims to the censor board official
– ‘In the acclaimed film Eight Women, cut one woman, so
there are seven women only’. The notion of a productive
discourse on censorship, is creatively explored in Tan’s film,
where instead of an erasure, censorship leads to a range
of effects in a riotous colourful conversation about films,
pumped up remixed songs and synchronized dancing.
The most blasphemous tongue-in-cheek moment in the
film, is when the geeky fan tells the official that the Pirates
Association is eternally grateful, because the huge amount
of cuts by the Board, has led to an incredible jump of 60%
increase in their sales. Perhaps that is the contradictory
reality that all regulatory mechanisms have to face these
days, the leak of information regardless of control, in bits
and bytes into various modes of circulation to eventually
lead viewers into seeing what they want.
Donna Harraway’s Cyborg Manifesto, talks about the
creation of an ironic political myth that is faithful to
feminism, socialism and materialism. And, in the context
of film censorship, Tan’s film Cut uses irony as ‘a rhetorical
strategy and a political method’, that is about ‘humour and
serious play’. As the geeky fan sings in Tan’s film – ‘Thank
you to the censors, for the scenes you’re chopping, for all
the crimes you’re stopping . So thank you, Madam Censor,
for saving our country’.
Namita Malhotra is a media practitioner and legal
researcher at the Alternative Law Forum in Bangalore,
India. She works on issues of media censorship, media
laws, intellectual property, and open content. She teaches
a course on Rethinking Media Laws at a women’s college
and has conducted sessions for the Censor Board of India
(the southern region) on the tangled history of censorship
and cinema.
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