The 26-year-old actress said although she has not watched the documentary 'India's Daughter' by British filmmaker Leslee Udwin, she feels the audience is mature enough to decide what they should watch.
"I think such things should be left to public discretion and people's intelligence. We are old enough to deal with our emotions in that way. If other people decide what we should watch then in a way they are judging our thought process. That is my problem.
The film's co-producer Vikramaditya Motwane echoed similar sentiments and said that banning is not the solution.
"Of course it (the documentary) should have been released. Nothing should be banned. I think it is just not good. We need to let people make their own judgement and if it is going to start a conversation then why not. I don't think anything should be brushed under the carpet at all," Motwane said.
"These sort of bans and curbing affect each and everyone of us. You cannot have an authority telling you this cannot happen and that cannot happen. It stunts us as a nation... The more you are suppressed, the more angry people will get," he said.
'NH10', a thriller about a road trip gone wrong, has been directed by Navdeep Singh and it will hit theatres this Friday.
