Mortada is backed by the powerful armed group, Hezbollah. Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah used the movie to ramp up his anti-LGBTQIA+ rhetoric, claiming that it posed an "imminent danger". Following Mortada's request, and set against the backdrop of the powerful growing anti-LGBTQIA+ Hezbollah-led campaign, Lebanon's interior ministry asked its censorship committee to review the film. The film was due to screen in Lebanon's cinemas from August 31st.
Kuwait, which had recently banned the Australian horror film, "Talk to Me" on similar grounds was much quicker to act. That Lebanon was the first to lead the calls for bans was surprising, given the country was also the first Arab nation to hold a gay pride week in 2017, and is viewed as a safe haven for the community in the conservative Middle East. Yet, with powerful movements rising to "preserve family units" and conservative sentiments, the country has reversed its broadly liberal stand so far.