Key Points
- Social media users in India have criticised a scene in the biopic Oppenheimer.
- Many users have vowed to boycott the film over its use of a Hindu scripture during a sex scene.
- A nationalist group have described the scene as a "scathing attack on Hinduism" and called for an investigation.
A scene featuring a holy Hindu scripture in the nuclear arms biopic Oppenheimer has drawn social media fire in India.
Many users said they would boycott the movie because of what one nationalist group called a "scathing attack on Hinduism".
The scene features the protagonist reciting a verse from the Bhagawad Gita, considered the holiest of Hindu scriptures, just before sexual intercourse. The line recited by Cillian Murphy reads "Now I am become Death, the destroyer of the worlds".
J. Robert Oppenheimer originally made a reference to this verse from the Bhagawad Gita in a 1965 NBC News documentary titled The Decision to Drop the Bomb, made 20 years after the atomic bombings Hiroshima and Nagasaki.
The film, which was released in India on Friday with much fanfare, was rated by the Central Board of Film Certification U/A, which recommends parental guidance for viewers aged under 12.
"This should be investigated... on an urgent basis and those involved should be severely punished," the nationalist Save Culture Save India Foundation group said in a press release.
Comments by the organisation's founder, government official Uday Mahurkar, condemning the movie were also retweeted more than 3,600 times.
Universal Pictures India, the local unit of the film's producers, did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
Officials from the film certification board did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
The movie, directed by Christopher Nolan, stars Cillian Murphy as U.S. physicist J. Robert Oppenheimer, who oversaw the creation of the atomic bomb during World War Two.
It grossed around 600 million rupees ($10.8 million) since Friday, Warner Bros Discovery, which released the film in India, said on Monday.
Indian cinemas, which like their global peers are struggling to attract viewers away from online streaming services, are banking on Oppenheimer and Barbie to boost earnings, especially after a string of Bollywood flops kept audiences away.