
📌 Key Points
- Alia Bhatt faced social media criticism regarding her Cannes appearance, including claims of being ‘ignored’ by photographers.
- Soni Razdan defended Alia, explaining that the viral ‘snub’ clip was a misinterpretation of red carpet chaos.
- Razdan’s response highlighted India’s obsession with Western validation and the tendency to ‘cut down’ successful women.
- The article suggests that the perceived ‘humiliation’ was invented by the internet, revealing more about society’s critical lens.
Soni Razdan has strongly reacted to the intense social media criticism targeting her daughter, Alia Bhatt, following her appearance at the Cannes Film Festival. Razdan addressed claims that Alia was ‘ignored’ by photographers, highlighting the online negativity and the public’s tendency to scrutinize successful women.
Alia Bhatt’s Cannes Appearance Sparks Debate
After making headlines for her appearance at the Cannes Film Festival, actor Alia Bhatt found herself at the centre of social media chatter, with trolls taking aim at her fashion choices and some even claiming she was “ignored” by a section of photographers on the red carpet. Amid the online buzz, Alia’s mother, Soni Razdan , has now reacted to the criticism.
In the post, Shunali wrote, “Alia Bhatt wasn’t ignored at Cannes. But India revealed something about itself. A clip went viral showing photographers distracted while Alia posed at Cannes. Within minutes, the internet decided: ‘She got snubbed, the West doesn’t care, she was humbled’. One distracted camera angle and the Indian internet began decoding national humiliation.”
“People weren’t just discussing the clip. They were enjoying it. We are obsessed with Western validation. And equally obsessed with cutting our own stars down to size. Is it not obvious? Cannes red carpets are chaos. Photographers shout, redirect, multitask, miss people, chase bigger arrivals, and adjust angles constantly. This is not the United Nations ranking of global celebrity worth. But no! We must attach meaning to photographers appearing momentarily distracted,” the post further read.
Soni Razdan Addresses “Ignored” Claims
Shunali mentioned that people mocked Alia over the clip with comments such as “she thinks she is international” and “reality check”.
“The irony? Alia Bhatt is already one of India’s biggest stars. A national award winner. Global ambassador. International campaigns. Massive films (highly unlikely she’s pegging her worth to your opinion of her Cannes moment). Hate to bring gender into it, but indulge me. We are obsessed with watching successful women “brought down a notch”. You can dislike celebrity culture. You can dislike nepotism debates. You can dislike Cannes influencer excess. But inventing humiliation where there was none says more about us than about her. Maybe the problem isn’t whether Cannes noticed Alia Bhatt. Maybe the problem is how badly we need Cannes to. And how quickly imagined rejection turns into entertainment when the woman involved is successful, visible and admired,” it ended.
Soni also took note of the post and stepped into the comment section, where she reacted to both the viral clip and the wave of backlash circulating on social media.
Social Media’s Obsession with Trolling Stars
“Social media is full of many things – love – information- entertainment- and …. a lot of hate. And more than anything else, it reveals something about society. A very interesting sociological discussion could ensue and be discussed and studied for years to come,” Soni wrote in the comment section.
Earlier this week, Alia herself took to social media to give a reply to a troll who commented, “Nobody noticed you”. Alia shared a reel flaunting her regal look in a custom ivory silk saree-gown at the Cannes film festival. In the comments section, a person wrote, “What a pity, no one noticed you,” along with a laughing emoji. However, Alia did not hold back and replied to the comment. She wrote, “Why pity love? You noticed me :)” Earlier, actors Sonu Sood and Aly Goni also defended Alia against the trolls.
Ultimately, Razdan’s response underscores a broader issue: the public’s quickness to invent humiliation and the societal tendency to critique successful women. It prompts reflection on whether the problem lies with celebrity perception or our own critical lens.



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