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        Mumbai, March 19 : Is it the end of the road for long   films? Although director Ashutosh Gowariker refused to shorten his "Jodhaa   Akbar", the exhibitors in the smaller centres have taken matters into their own   hands. The magnum opus that weaves its story around the romance   between Mughal emperor Jalaluddin Akbar and Rajput princess Jodha Bai is 3 hours   20 minutes long.
 
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  Vital sequences amounting to a good 30 minutes of playing time, including   Hrithik Roshan's elephant fight and Aishwarya Rai's culinary conflict with Ila   Arun, have been edited out from the film in Patna. 
 According to sources,   this has been done to accommodate the mandatory four shows that had been denied   in the film to start with. However, the film's Bihar distributor is none too   pleased with the local exhibitor's editorial skills.
 
 "I was myself   shocked to see some of the key scenes gone from 'Jodhaa Akbar'. I don't think   any exhibitor has the right to act above the creative rights of a film's   director and producer," the distributor said.
 
 "Earlier, a good 45-60   minutes were forced out of J.P. Dutta'a 'LoC' when the director had   categorically instructed exhibitors not to cut his film. If you don't wish to   run a long film, please don't screen the film. But please don't act god over the   film's fate," the distributor added.
 
 Siddharth Roy Kapoor, marketing and   distribution head of UTV Motion Pictures, is unfazed by the extra-constitutional   editing of their premium product.
 
 "It's hard to monitor what happens at   the smaller centres. But we're not the least daunted. We at the UTV are   certainly not going to dictate a film's length to a director just to fit into   the screening timings. Ashutosh Gowariker is making another film for UTV and   he's welcome to make it as long or short as he wants to," Kapoor   said.
 
 Decades ago, scenes and footage were added to a film as it   progressed towards that now-fugitive goal of a silver jubilee. But today's   average viewer has no patience to watch a film that exceeds two hours.
 (IANS) |    
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