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At the fag end of the 19th century
the brothers Lumiere held the first public
screening of film in the darkened basement of a
Paris café. Their invention, the cinematograph
was a camera, a projector and a printer rolled
into one, and defying Louis Lumiere’s
expectation that “cinema is an invention without
a future”, it became the tool for a most potent
art. |
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The first feature film to be made in India was
the silent black and white epic of ‘Raja
Harishchandra’, a popular figure of legend who
is still upheld as a symbol of truthfulness. The
film was made by Dadasaheb Phalke, the man who
is credited as being the father of Indian
cinema.
The first talkie was made in 1931, when sound
swept through the fledgling movie industry.
‘Alam Ara’ was the first of the Indian talkies.
With a soundtrack, films acquired a mass
following. It suddenly became financially
feasible to make movies and so it was that film
production took off in regional centres around
the country. The Bengalis, Tamilians and Telugu
were first off the block, followed by filmmakers
from Assam, Karnataka, Maharashtra, Gujarat and
Orissa. Colour came to Indian films with ‘Kisan
Kanya’ in 1937.
With colour and sound, the motion picture had
come of age and it didn’t take Indians very long
to tap this form of popular entertainment for
all its worth. Today the Indian film industry
churns out a mammoth 800 films annually, give or
take a few. A fourth of these come from the
Bombay industry, which, after a take on its LA
counterpart, is popularly referred to as
‘Bollywood’. While every region has its own film
industry, those that predominate are the
Tamilian, the Telugu, the Malayalam (a.k.a.
Mollywood!) and the Bengali (a.k.a. Tollywood
after the Calcutta locality, Tollygunge).
The standard fare churned out of the film
factory is what is called the “masala film”. The
formula these movies employ to tug at the
filmgoer’s sentiments and purse strings consists
of liberal doses of action and melodrama, and
dances to numbers that are produced by a music
industry that is dedicated to the sole purpose
of providing these 800 films with at least 4800
songs. The sentiments vary from era to era
depending on the public mood and the ‘big social
problem’ of the times.
There used to be a distinct parallel cinema,
distinguished from its mainstream cousin in
content and style. The emotions were subtle, the
themes delicate and marked by a seriousness of
purpose. While the popular cinema encouraged the
imitation of art in life (spurring countless
youth to chase women on the streets, the day’s
most popular song on their lips), this other
cinema consciously tried to imitate life. But
not many people would pay to watch the dreary
bits of their lives on 70mm, and starved of
funds, trying to tap the huge mass market,
parallel cinema makers died out as a breed.
The best of Indian cinema today has picked up
the values and concerns of the ‘art house
movement’ and merged it with a song-dance format
to create movies that are commercially viable as
well as aesthetically sound. The worst… well,
that’s high entertainment and calls for a
complete suspension of belief for the duration
of 90 minutes! |