Bajrang Dal members went on a rampage on the set of filmmaker Prakash Jha's web series in Bhopal. (File)
Mumbai: Filmmakers Hansal Mehta, Sudhir Mishra, and Pritish Nandy stressed upon the urgent need to band together against relentless targeting of the Hindi film industry after director-producer Prakash Jha and his crew were attacked while they were filming the third season of the series "Ashram" in Bhopal.
Bajrang Dal activists allegedly ransacked the set of the series on Sunday and also threw ink on Jha, its producer-director, accusing him of portraying Hindus wrongly. The show, which was released last year, features actor Bobby Deol as Baba Nirala, a conman.
Sharing a news report on his Twitter profile, Mr Mehta said he wondered who from the industry would voice their concern regarding the attack on their colleagues.
"Scared silence and continued deference will only empower such hooligans and further such oppression. But who will bell the cat?" the "Scam 1992" maker wrote.
Actor Swara Bhasker said she was horrified after learning about the incident and noted that the attack points towards the growing intolerance in the country.
"Shocking, shameful and utterly believable! No one is safe in #NewIndia.. The culture of rampant impunity to lynch mobs has brought us to a point where anyone can be attacked anytime for anything! Surreal and horrifying," she tweeted.
According to the police, the windscreens of two buses of the crew were broken in stone-pelting, with Bajrang Dal threatening that it would not allow the shooting of the web series further.
Filmmaker Sudhir Mishra condemned the attack and hoped the film associations would stand up for its members.
"This is terrible. The industry has to get together otherwise... (do I have to state it ). Come on ''associations'', stand with your members."
Replying to Mr Mishra, filmmaker Ashwini Chaudhary wrote that the associations don't stand up for any cause and alleged they are hand in glove with the government which is responsible for empowering "fringe groups".
"They and their representatives openly stand by the government of the day who is standing behind such fringe groups," he said.
Two film bodies, Producers Guild of India and Federation of Western India Cine Employees (FWICE) on Monday condemned the incident and said the government must take action on such "brazen acts of violence".
Tagging Union Minister of Information and Broadcasting Anurag Thakur, filmmaker Pritish Nandy wrote, "There appears to be no end to these kind of attacks. It is time the ministry spoke out and reined these guys in. They are running amuck."
Filmmaker Sanjay Gupta shared a news report on the incident and called it "disgusting."
"Jaane Tu Ya Jaane Na" helmer Abbas Tyrewala took to Facebook and penned a note, describing the alarming consequences of the industry's silence.
"They are coming for you," he began the post.
"You think you're on their side? Wait till you do something they think is wrong. Make a show. Make an ad. Sing a song. Wear clothes. Meet a friend. Fall in love. Eat something. Drink something. Smoke something. Pray. Don't pray. Say something. Don't say something. Ask anything. Believe anything. Other than what has been 'sanctioned'," Abbas Tyrewala wrote.
The writer-director urged people to read "The Trial", the iconic German short story wherein writer Franz Kafka questioned the functioning of the judiciary in the 20th-century.
"You may not be next. Not yet. But unless you're 'in' the mob, your turn and your family's turn and your children's turn are inevitable. There is only one 'them'. And it's all of us," he concluded.
It is not the first time that a film's crew has faced such attacks.
Director Sanjay Leela Bhansali's Jaigharh set for the shooting of 2018 film "Padmaavat" was vandalised by a fringe group. They had also assaulted the filmmaker, claiming the movie was distorting facts. Film's lead star Deepika Padukone also faced threats.
(Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by NDTV staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)