The officers -- R V Ramyabharathi, Superintendent of Police Coimbatore, S Lakshmi, Deputy Commissioner of Police (DCP), Coimbatore City, and Disha Mittal, DCP, Tiruppur City -- urged the entertainment sector to "restrain from glorifying demeaning and insulting dialgues and lyrics".
The three women officials had spoken to Coimbatore-based online portal, 'The Covai Post,' and the video has gone viral.
Ramyabharathy said film lyrics and dialogue have a "devastating impact on young minds."
Everyday, police received, on an average, a dozen complaints of misbehaviour, assault and stalking against women, while many go unreported, she said.
"Sadly in today's context there is glorification of demeaning dialogues and derogatory lyrics (in films) that have also become runaway hits and blockbusters," she said.
She appealed to the film fraternity not to encourage such dialogue and lyrics.
"You don't have to be a woman to be woman. If you respect a woman, you are man enough," the officer said.
"That being the case a powerful media should be used carefully," she said.
She said there were lyrics in cinema songs "which instigate violence against women," and asked the lyricists penning them, actors featuring in them and directors to have "some social concern."
There were women in their own households, she pointed out.
Mittal, handling law and order, said the entertainment industry played a 'major role' in our daily lives.
She said it was "an undisputed" fact that TV programmes, advertisements, lyrics and dialogues had 'profound impact' on a mind, a spirit and a behaviour which can be both positive and negative.
She had personally come across incidents where the delinquents "have been almost instigated, inspired by certain movie plots, dialogues and lewd songs," Mittal noted.
"As an officer of the Indian Police Service, it is my honest request to the entertainment industry to be more responsible," she urged.
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