Films arrived in India less than a year after the Lumieres first
exhibited their cinematographie in Paris. On July 7,
1896, an agent who had brought equipment and films from France first
showed his moving pictures in Bombay. That was an important day in
the social and cultural history of the Indian people.
The first Indian-made feature film (3700 feet long) was released
in 1913. It was made by Dadasaheb Phalke and was called Raja
Harishchandra. Based on a story from the Mahabharata it
was a stirring film concerned with honour, sacrifice and mighty
deeds. From then on many "mythologicals" were made and took India by
storm. Phalke's company alone produced about a hundred films.
What little remains of Indian silent cinema up to 1931 barely
fills six video-cassettes in the National Film Archives of India,
but it is remarkable for the way traditional "theatrical" framing
(static characters, faced front on by the camera) is animated by a
considerable investment in location shooting, both in natural
surroundings and in the city. This is evident not only in Raja
Harishchandra, but also in historical-cum-stunt films such as
Diler Jigar/Gallant Hearts (SS Agarwal; 1931) and Gulaminu
Patan/The Fall of Slavery (SS Agarwal; 1931), and in the
international co-productions directed by Himansu Rai and the German
Franz Osten. Among these, Light of Asia (1925), about the
Buddha, and Shiraz (1928), about the origins of the Taj
Mahal, referred to as 'Romances from India' by their producers,
render "India" as a startling, exotic assemblage: scenes of ancient
and medieval court life, attended by the ritual of courtly gesture,
and by spectacular processions of elephants and camels, are
juxtaposed with a glittering naturalism.

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A d v e n t o f
S o u n d |
By the time of the First World War, and the phenomenal expansion
of Hollywood, 85% of feature films shown in India were American. But
the introduction of sound made an immediate difference. In 1931,
India's first talkie, Alam Ara, was released, dubbed into
Hindi and Urdu. As the talkies emerged over the next decade, so too
did a new series of issues. The most prominent of these, of course,
was language, and language markets; alongside, there are
considerations of regional identity, of the different places that
separately and together make up India. Many films of the time were
produced both in the regional language (Bengali, Marathi), and in
Hindi, so that they could be oriented to the larger Hindi-speaking
market. The Indian public quite naturally preferred to see films
made in their own language and the more songs they had the better.
In those days, the films made had upto 40 songs. This song tradition
still persists in Indian commercial cinema.

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T h e 1 9 3 0 s
a n d 4 0 s
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While addressing social differences of caste, class and the
relations between the sexes, the "social" films of the 1930s adopted
a modernist outlook in an essentially converging of society. Many
directors of the time showed great innovation. The Marathi director,
V Shantaram, for example, was alert to world trends in film-making,
deploying expressionist effects intelligently in such works as
Amrit Manthan (Prabhat Talkies; 1934).
In what was probably
the most important film of the period, Devdas (1935), the
director Pramathesh Barua created a startlingly edited climax to a
tale of love frustrated by social distinction and masculine
ineffectuality. Released in Bengali, Hindi and Tamil, Devdas
created an oddly ambivalent hero for this period (and again, through
a Hindi remake directed by Bimal Roy in 1955), predicated on
indecision, frustration and a focus on failure and longing rather
than on achievement.
By the 1940s the social film further delimited its focus by
excluding particularly fraught issues, especially of caste division.
A representative example, prefiguring the kind of entertainment
extravaganza that has become the hallmark of the Bombay film, was
Kismet/Fate (Gyan Mukerji; Bombay Talkies, 1943), which broke
all box-office records and ran for more than two years. Family and
class become the key issues in the representation of society, and
the story's location is an indeterminate urban one.
Although this became the model for popular cinema, especially
after the decline of regional industries in Maharashtra and Bengal
by the end of the 1940s, different strains are observable in the
Tamil films of the same period. In the 1930s, the Tamil cinema
gained national recognition with the costume extravaganza,
Chandralekha, directed by SS Vasan for Gemini studios, and
called by its director a "pageant for our peasants" (a large section
of the audience would have been illiterate). Its story, of the
conflict for the inheritance of an empire, is laden with overblown
set-pieces and crowds of extras. Even more significant than this
investment in the spectacular was its "Tamil-ness", the recognition
of a national existence different to that portrayed in the Bombay
output.

By the start of the 1950s, Calcutta became the vanguard of the
art cinema, with the emergence of the film society movement at the
end of the 1940s and Satyajit Ray's Pather Panchali/Song of the
Road, produced with West Bengal state government support in
1955. Post-independence, despite a relatively sympathetic government
enquiry in 1951, the industry became the object of considerable
moral scrutiny and criticism, and was subject to severe taxation. A
covert consensus emerged between proponents of art cinema and the
state, all focussing on the imperative to create a "better" cinema.
The Film and Television Institute of India was established at Pune
in 1959 to develop technical skills for an industry seen to be
lacking in this field. However, active support for parallel cinema,
as it came to be called, only really took off at the end of the
1960s, under the aegis of the government's Film Finance Corporation,
set up in 1961 to support new film-makers.
Ironically, this pressure and vocal criticism occurred at a time
when arguably some of the most interesting work in popular cinema
was being produced. Radical cultural organizations, loosely
associated with the Indian Communist Party, had organized themselves
as the All India Progressive Writers Association and the Indian
People's Theatre Association (IPTA). The latter had produced
Dharti ke Lal/Sons of the Soil (KA Abbas; 1943), and its
impact on the industry can be seen in the work of radical writers
such as Abbas, lyricists such as Sahir Ludhianvi, and directors such
as Bimal Roy and Zia Sarhady.
In addition, directors such as Raj Kapoor, Guru Dutt and Mehboob
Khan, while not directly involved with IPTA, created films that
reflected a passionate concern for questions of social justice.
Largely studio-based, the films of this era nevertheless
incorporated vivid stylistic experimentation, influenced by
international currents in film-making. Such effects are evident in
Awara/The Vagabond (Raj Kapoor, 1951, script by KA Abbas),
Awaaz/The Call (Zia Sarhady; 1956) and Pyaasa/Craving
(Guru Dutt; 1957).
The First
International Film Festival, held in Bombay in 1951, showed Italian
works for the first time in India. The influence of Neorealism can
be seen in films such as Do Bigha Zamin/Two Measures of Land
(Bimal Roy, 1953), a portrait of father and son eking out a living
in Calcutta that strongly echoes the narrative of Vittorio de Sica's
Bicycle Thief (1948). Mehboob Khan's Andaz/Style
(1949), an upperclass love triangle founded on a tragic
misunderstanding, draws on codes of psychological representation -
hallucinations and dreams that feature strongly in 1940s Hollywood
melodrama. Mehboob's tendency to make a visual spectacle of his
material, and his involvement with populist themes and issues make
him a good example of popular cinema of the time.

India's emergent art cinema, led by the Bengali directors Ray,
Mrinal Sen and Ritwik Ghatak reacted against such spectacle.
Satyajit Ray's world-famous
debut, Pather Panchali (1955), is based on many of the themes
that engaged contemporary popular film-makers of the time, such as
loss of social status, economic injustice, uprootment, but sets them
within a naturalistic, realist frame which put a special value on
the Bengali countryside, locating it as a place of nostalgia, to
which the urban and individualist sensibility of its protagonist,
Apu, looked with longing.
In Ray's later work on urban middle-class existence,
Mahanagar/Big City (1963), Charulata (1964),
Seemabadha/Company Limited (1971), Pratidwandi/The
Protagonist (1970), and Jana Aranya/The Middleman (1975),
his rational, humanist vision is at the same time at home in the
city, and repulsed by it; overarching estrangement is relayed
through images of futile job interviews, cynical corporate schemes,
murky deals in respectable cafes. Wedded to the traditions of the
nineteenth-century intelligentsia, he finds society wanting,
vilifies it for its ignorance and corruption, and oversees the
malignant terrain below with a lofty disdain. Ray's women, such as
the mother, Sarbojaya of Pather Panchali, the tomboy Aparna Sen of
Samapti/TheEnd(1961), Madhabi Mukherjee in Charulata
and Mahanagar, and Kaberi Bose in Aranyer din
Ratri, are splendidly drawn portraits in the realist tradition.
In contrast to Ray, his contemporaries Mrinal Sen and Ritwik
Ghatak set out to expose the dark underside of India's lower
middle-class and unemployed. Sen, after a phase of uneven, didactic
political cinema at the height of the Maoist-inspired Naxalite
movement of the early 1970s - marked by the trilogy
Interview(1971), Calcutta 71(1972) and Padatik/The
Guerrilla Fighter (1973) - made two films, Akaler
Sandhane/Search of Famine (1980) and Khandar/Ruins
(1983), about film-making itself, exploring its inherent distance
and disengagement, and the problems entailed in trying to record
"reality".
Perhaps the most outstanding figure of this generation,
fulfilling the potential of the radical cultural initiatives of the
IPTA, was the great Ritwik Ghatak. Disruption, the problems of
locating oneself in a new environment, and the indignities and
oppression of common people are the recurrent themes of this poet of
Partition, who lamented the division of Bengal in 1947. Disharmony
and discontinuity could be said to be the hallmark of
Nagarik/Citizen (1952) and Meghe Dhaka Tara/Cloud-capped
Star (1960), where studio sets of street corners mingle uneasily
with live-action shots of Calcutta. There is something deliberately
jarring about the rhythms of editing, the use of sound, and the
compositions, as if the director refuses to allow us to settle into
a comfortable, familiar frame of viewing. In Aajantrik/Man and
Machine (1958) and Subarnarekha (1952, released 1965) he
juxtaposes the displaced and transient urban figure with tribal
peoples; placing the human figure at the edge of the frame, dwarfed
by majestic nature.

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T h e I n d i a n
P o p u l a r C i n e m a
a n d t h e S u p e r s t
a r s |
During the 1960s, popular cinema had shifted its social concerns
towards more romantic genres, showcasing such new stars as Shammi
Kapoor - a kind of Indian Elvis - and later, Rajesh Khanna, a soft,
romantic hero. The period is also notable for a more assertive
Indian nationalism. Following the Indo-Pakistan wars of 1962 and
1965, the Indian officer came to be a rallying point for the
national imagination in films such as Sangam/Meeting of
Hearts (Raj Kapoor, 1964) and Aradhana/Adoration (Shakti
Samanta; 1969).
However, the political and
economic upheaval of the following decade saw a return to social
questions across the board, in both the art and popular cinemas. The
accepted turning point in the popular film was the angry, violent
Zanjeer/The Chain (Prakash Mehra; 1973), which fed into the
anxieties and frustrations generated by the quickening but lopsided
pace of industrialization and urbanization. Establishing Amitabh
Bachchan as the biggest star of the next decade, its policeman hero
is ousted from service through a conspiracy, and takes the law into
his own hands to render justice and to avenge his deceased parents.
The considerable political turmoil of the next few years,
including the railway strike of 1974 and the Nav Nirman
movement led by JP Narayan in Bihar and Gujarat, ultimately led to
the declaration of Indira Gandhi's Emergency in 1975. It was as if
the state and the people had split apart. As the cities grew, so did
the audiences. The popular cinema generated an ambiguous figure to
express this alienation. At the level of images, there was a greater
investment in the stresses of everyday life and, unlike the 1950s,
in location shooting. In Zanjeer, the casual killing of a
witness on Bombay's commuter trains conjures up the perils of life
in the metropolis. This is echoed in images of the dockyard,
taxi-rank, railtrack and construction site in Deewar/The Wall
(Yash Chopra; 1975), also starring Amitabh Bachchan.
The recurrent narrative of these films, of protagonists uprooted
from small town and rural families to the perils of the city, is
shared by the street children researched by professional
sociologists in Mira Nair's Salaam Bombay (1988). The Bombay
films' very excesses, their grand gestures, and the priority given
to emotion and excitement may more truly reflect the dominant
rhythms of urban life in India. At the level of plot and character,
however, the Bombay films simultaneously simplify and collapse our
sense of India, reducing the enormous variety of identity - social,
regional, ethnic and religious - that makes up Indian society. Where
these identities appear, they do so as caricatures and objects of
fun.

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T h e A r t
C i n e m a o f t h e
8 0 s |
To counter this, the art cinema
of the 1980s diversified from its Bengali moorings of the earlier
period under the aegis of the Film Finance Corporation. Works by
Shyam Benegal, Gautam Ghose, Saeed Mirza, BV Karanth, Girish
Kasaravaili, Mrinal Sen, MS Sathyu, Ray, and Kundan Shah, among
others, actively addressed questions of social injustice: problems
of landlord exploitation, bonded labour, untouchability, urban
power, corruption and criminal extortion, the oppression of women,
and political manipulation. Ghatak in particular had addressed many
of these issues earlier, but never had there been such an outpouring
of the social conscience, nor such a flowing of new images - of
regional landscapes, cultures, and social structures. Many of the
films may seem didactic and uncomplex, undercutting the attention to
form that had marked the earlier period - but not all. Benegal's
first two films indicate an unusual concern with the psychology of
domination and subordination. Ankur/The Seedling (1974),
starring Shabana Azmi, is particularly striking not only for this
but also for the open, fluid way it captures the countryside. Among
Kannada directors, working in south India, Kasaravalli in
Ghattashradha (1981) effected an intimate vision of the
oppression of widows through the view of a child. And special
mention must be made of Kundan Shah's Jaane Bhi Do Yaaron/Let
Sleeping Dogs Lie (1984), a wonderful exercise in farce and
slapstick that is also a brilliant portrait of Bombay.

The most notable of the directors who speak specifically about
their own cultures, and about the possibilities of change, are Adoor
Gopalakrishnan and Aravindan from Kerala. A key to their
productivity was the overall development of film culture in Kerala,
India's most literate state. In his films Gopalakrishnan transformed
the lush countryside, busy towns and animated culture of Kerala into
a strange, dissociated place, fraught with communicative gaps,
menacing, inexplicable characters, and an overall sense of the
impenetrable. Subjects range from the mounting tragedies that beset
a young couple in the city (Swayamvaram/One's Own Choice;
1972), and the effete authoritarianism of a declining feudal
landlord (Elippathayam/The Rat-Trap; 1984), to the mysterious
spiritual decline of a popular communist activist (Mukha
Mukham/Face to Face; 1987).
The late Aravindan, sometime cartoonist and employee of the
Kerala Rubber Board, had something of the mystic in him, but went
through a range of styles, including a cinemaverite approach,
as in Thampu/The Circus Tent (1978), in which circus
performers speak direct to the camera. His episode from the
Ramayana, Kanchana Sita/Golden Sita, places the action
against the grain of the high Hindu tradition by situating it among
tribes in the verdant landscape of the Kerala forests. At his best,
his narrative style refuses a didactic approach, generating a
whimsical sense of how destinies are shaped.

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C o n t e m p o r a r y
I n d i a n C i n e m a
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In the 1990s, video, national and satellite/cable television have
resulted in the development of a prolonged crisis in lndia's movie
industry, where commercial and art films are equally at risk of
failing at the box office. The problems of the latter are mainly due
to a persistent failure to find distribution outlets. Now, more and
more film-makers of both streams look to television. The state film
finance unit (now named the National Film Development Corporation)
has a major stake in the expansion of the national network.
There have been two responses to this crisis. The first, at the
economic level, has been to try and curb film piracy, and to
systematize the relationship of film to video. The second is an
investment in new technology, and in new forms of story-telling. The
Telugu and Tamil industries, and directors such as Ram Gopal Varma
and Mani Ratnam, are at the forefront of such moves, showing a
lively interest in new techniques in American cinema. Varma's
Shiva (1990) and Raat/Night (1991) showcase the use of
steadicam - in the latter, to the exclusion of any serious
narrative. The technical virtuosity of Mani Ratnam's works as well
as their elegant story-telling and restrained performances have
attracted a following among film buffs across the country, who
identify with his style and, implicitly, with the image of a
dynamic, modern identity. In 1993, Ratnam made an important
breakthrough with Roja, a love story about a young Tamil
peasant woman and her husband, a cryptographer who decodes messages
for military intelligence. The couple are transported to Kashmir,
which is subject to sustained separatist extremism. Embroiling the
Tamil couple in a national issue that might have seemed remote to an
earlier generation, the film identified a new pan-Indian field of
interest. Dubbed into Hindi, it was a national success, giving rise
to the dubbing of a number of southern films.
