When
the
trailer
of
Kartik
Aaryan's
'Pati
Patni
Aur
Woh'
dropped
on
the
internet,
the
film
received
heavy
backlash
over
a
dialogue
on
marital
rape
where
the
actor's
character
Chintu
Tyagi
is
seen
ranting
to
his
friend,
"Biwi
se
sex
maang
lein
toh
hum
bikhaari.
Biwi
ko
sex
na
de
toh
hum
atyachaari.
Aur
kisi
tarah
jugaad
laga
ke
usse
sex
haasil
kar
lena
toh
balaatkari
bhi
hum
hai."
After
receiving
heavy
flak,
the
makers
rectified
the
said
dialogue.
However,
director
Mudassar
Aziz
isn't
pleased
with
it.
Here's
what
he
had
to
say.
Mudassar
Aziz
Is
Upset
With
The
Outrage
The
director
said, "A
lot
of
people
said
the
dialogue
insinuated
that
marital
rape
is
ok.
What's
the
line?
A
man
seems
to
be
saying,
‘If
I
do
this
I'm
called
this,
if
I
do
that
I'm
called
this
also.'
Ninety
nine
percent
of
men
in
the
country
do
not
even
know
when
they
are
committing
marital
rape.
Coming
back
home
after
work
and
waking
up
a
sleeping
wife,
even
if
you
indulge
in
foreplay,
that's
not
consent.
A
filmmaker
presents
that
line
in
a
film,
everyone
starts
to
tell
him
to
remove
that
word
from
the
film.
We
have
reached
a
stage
where
a
12-year-old
needs
to
know
what
rape
is.
If
you
are
not
going
to
say
‘balatkar',
no
one's
going
to
understand
what
it
is."
The
Director
Says
It's
Unfortunate
That
The
Word
Had
To
Be
Replaced
"It
was
very
unfortunate
that
the
word
has
had
to
be
replaced.
It
is
unfortunate
because
I
maintain
my
stand
that
even
a
12-year-old
needs
to
know
what
rape
is.
The
act
is
wrong,
but
if
you
are
not
going
to
talk
about
it,
if
they
aren't
going
to
know
what
the
term
stands
for,
you
are
going
to
be
a
generation
that's
unaware.
Don't
stop
the
word,
stop
the
act."
'I
Want
People
To
React
After
Watching
My
Films'
He
further
added,
"Centuries
ago,
people
who
had
easy
access
to
guns
and
went
about
firing
it
were
called
‘trigger
happy'.
Now,
we
are
in
a
‘finger
happy' generation
which
doesn't
waste
a
single
second
in
putting
out
an
opinion
on
something
that
one
hasn't
entirely
seen
or
don't
know
the
context.
I
make
films
for
people
and
I
want
them
to
react
after
watching
them."
The
Filmmaker
Questions
The
Duality
Of
People
"Nobody
is
making
light
of
this
situation,
but
if
you
are
not
going
to
talk
about
it,
you
are
never
going
to
come
out
from
the
woods.
I
am
amazed
that
in
this
country,
with
such
high
rape
percentage,
we
don't
use
the
word
rape
in
our
films?
What
do
you
want
to
call
it?
Rape
percentage
won't
drop
if
we
don't
mention
‘rape' in
our
films
or
books.
Let's
talk
about
it.
By
muting
that
word,
you
are
not
getting
anything.
What
sort
of
double
standard
is
it
that
in
one
film
a
person
reads
‘balatkaar'
36
times
from
a
letter
and
everyone
was
laughing.
(in
an
apparent
reference
to
a
scene
in
3
idiots)."