Cinema in India before 1913

From Indpaedia
Jump to: navigation, search

Hindi English French German Italian Portuguese Russian Spanish

Contents

Cinema in India before 1913

Title and authorship of the original article(s)

This is an article selected for the excellence of its content.
You can help by adding similar details about Tamil, Telugu, Bengali and all the other cinemas of India. Also please bring it up to date. Please also put categories, paragraph indents, headings and sub-headings,and combine this with other articles on exactly the same subject.

See examples and a tutorial.

Brief history of Indian cinema By UrooJ, aligarians.com, Mid-2000 Aligarians

History of Indian Cinema Bollywoodvillage

1886

1886.jpg

In 1886 the Lumiere Brothers Cinematographe unveiled six soundless short films at Bombay's Watson's Hotel. Soon after, Hiralal Sen and H.S. Bhatavdekar started making films in Calcutta and Bombay, respectively. Like Lumiere Brothers Bhatavdekar made India's first actuality films in 1899. Though there were efforts at filming stage plays earlier India's first feature film Raja Harishchandra was made in 1913 by Dadasaheb Phalke who is known as the Father of Indian Cinema.

1907

1907 : J.F. Madan opens the Elphinstone Picture Palace in Calcutta, the first of his cinema chain. Pathe establishes office in India.

1908 : Abdulallay Esoofally, a South Asian and Singaporean traveling showman starts exhibiting in India.

1910

1910 : Dadasaheb Phalke attends a screening of The Life of Christ at P.B. Mehta’s American - Indian Cinema and decides to become a filmmaker himself.

1911 : Anandi Bose, Debi Bose and others start the Aurora Cinema Co. showing films in tents as part of a variety bill. The Coronation Durbar of King George V held in Delhi is filmed by several Indians. (S.N. Patankar, Hiralal Sen, Madan Theatres)

1912 : Two amateurs N.G. Chitre and R.G. Torney attempt a narrative film, about 1500 feet long, of a play - Pundalik.

Did Hiralal Sen, and not Phalke, make India's first feature film?

In Calcutta there is a legend (and persistent belief) that between roughly 1903 and 1913 photographer Hiralal Sen had made six or seven or even more feature films. If this is correct then the history of Indian cinema needs to be re-written. This will make Sen, and not Phalke, the father of Indian cinema.

According to this legend, Sen released a two-hour screen version of Ali Baba and the Forty Thieves in 1903—a full ten years before Raja Harishchandra, currently considered India’s first feature film.

Indeed, The Statesman records a view that Hiralal made his first moving film in 1898. (He did, but it was not a feature.)

Why are no prints of any of the films available? Because, in 1917, after Sen's death, a fire destroyed all the films that he had ever made. That no prints of Sen's films exist is no reason to consider him the pioneer of Indian cinema. After all, there are no extant prints of Alam Ara either.

Whether there is any truth in this legend can be easily verified by going through the Calcutta newspapers of 1903, of the period between 1903 and 1917 and, especially newspaper coverage of that fateful fire of 1917. Is there any mention of Sen’s feature films?

The article Hiralal Sen discusses the pioneer's life and works. Indpaedia's conclusion is that what are being described as 'feature films' were,in fact, filmed sequences from stage plays. Only Ali Baba was a full-length, two-hour theatrical production recorded on film. It was never screened commercially in its entirety.

Evidence to the contrary is eagerly awaited, for it can change the history of Indian cinema.

See also

Hiralal Sen

Indian cinema: historical outline Covers the era before the first Indian feature film

Indian cinema: 1913-20

Indian cinema: 1920-29

Indian cinema: 1930-39

Indian cinema: 1940-49

Indian cinema: 1950-59

Indian cinema: 1960-69

Indian cinema: 1970-79

Indian cinema: 1980-89

Indian cinema: 1990-99

Indian cinema: 2000-09

Indian cinema: 2010-19

CinemaScope and 70mm films Mainly about the 1950s, 1960s and 1970s.

70mm films in India/ South Asia I.e. Part 2 of this article. Mainly about the 1960s and 1970s.

Cinerama theatres in India, Pakistan, Sri LankaMainly about the 1960s.

3D films in South Asia

Colour films in South Asia: 1—South Asia as a whole.

Colour films in South Asia: 2 (Indian Cinema)—India as a whole.

Colour films in South Asia: 3-- Hindi-Urdu films. Mainly about the 1950s and 1960s.

See all articles on South Asian cinema in the alphabetical indexes of

Cinema-Tv-Pop

Cinema-TV-Pop

by clicking these links here, or at the bottom of this page.
Retrieved from ‘http://www.indpaedia.com/ind/index.php?title=Cinema_in_India_before_1913&oldid=19971
Personal tools
Namespaces

Variants
Actions
Navigation
Toolbox
Translate