Title: History of Indian Cinema
1What we will be discussing
- History of Indian Cinema
- What Bollywood Is
- How Music Influences Indian Films
2By Suraj Tandon
3History
- The Beginning The Silent Movie Era
- Cinema came to India on July 7, 1896 - Lumiere
Brothers' Cinematograph films in Bombay. - In 1899, Harishchandra Sakharam Bhatavdekar - two
short films The Wrestlers and, Man and
Monkey. - First entirely Indian-made film, Raja
Harischandra, (Considered Father of Indian
Cinema) (produced and directed by D. G. Phalke)
- - released on May 3rd, 1913.
4First Feature Film Raja Harishchandra -1913
5- The Era of Talking Movies (1930 -1940)
- India's first talkie Alam Ara (Light of the
world) Used a single sound system. Sound and
image recorded as one. - Was released on March 14th, 1931.
-
- Produced by
- Ardeshir Irani. Through
- Imperial Film Co.
6- Majority of Indias population during the late
- 1890s was illiterate.
- Film industry exploded in India because
- movies were a means in which the citizens of
- India could entertain themselves.
- Movies produced within the 1930s 1940s
- contained many songs and dances.
7- As the talkies emerged, so did issues related to
language of the film emerge. The various regional
languages in India led film makers to produce
films in both the regional language (Bengali,
Marathi), and in Hindi, in order to cater to the
larger Hindi-speaking market. - The films of this era were mostly musicals and
some of them had up to 40 songs. - Three big filmmaking institutions, Madan
Theatres, Krishna Film Co., and Imperial Film Co.
8- The films in the 30's were more modernistic in
their outlook. - One of the most prominent films of this period is
Pramathesh Barua's Devdas(1935). - Playback singing was introduced to Indian cinema
by Nitin Bose in 1935, with the Hindi film Dhoop
Chaon (sunlight and shade). - Double sound system where sound and image were
recorded separately. Allowed for easy editing
afterwards.
9 SIGNIFICANT FILMS
1931 Alam Ara c. Ard. Irani (first Indian
talking film)1931 Shirin Farhad (sound and Image
recorded separately)1931 Jamai Babu c. D.R.
Bardkar (Images of Urban Calcutta)1932 Noorjaban
c. Adr. Irani (Indias first talkie in
English)1932 Indraprastha c. T. Marconi (song
dance spectacular) 1934 Karam c.1935 Devdas c.
Yusuf Muljee, Bimal Roy, Sudhin Majumdar Dilip
Gupta1936 Bangalee c. Bibhuti Das1936 Sant
Tukaram c. V. Avadhoot1937 Mukti c. Bimal Roy
(Tracks, Mix of Interior Exterior,
Expressionism Realism)1938 Duniya na Mane c.
Avadhoot
10 Pramathesh Barua's 'Devdas' (1935) Original
11Dilip Kumar in Bimal Roy's 'Devdas' (1955)
12Sharukh Khan Madhuri Dixit in Sanjay Leela
Bansali's 'Devdas' (2002)
13- 1951 1960
- There was an active support for "parallel cinema"
which talked about social issues, problems and
values of the society. - The Film and Television Institute of India was
established at Pune in 1959 - 1950s and 1960s regarded "Golden Age" of Indian
cinema in terms of films, stars, music and
lyrics.
14- 1961 1980
- In the 70s, gap between multi-starrer, big budget
films increased. Mostly action oriented with
revenge as their dominating theme. - Rise of India's greatest superstar, Amitabh
Bachchan (Sholay/Flames 1975). - 1981 1990, Even to present time
- Revival of the musical love stories in Indian
cinema.
15(No Transcript)
16What is Bollywood?
- Bollywood is the informal name given to the
popular Mumbai-based film industry in India.
Created by blending Bombay (the city now
officially called Mumbai) and Hollywood, the
famous center of the United States film industry. - It is commonly referred to as "Hindi cinema.
Majority of films produced by Bollywood are in
Hindi dialect - They are usually musicals. Very rare to see an
Indian movie without song and dance. Half of
movie is usually musical other half contains
dialogue.
17- Consist of many songs and dances approximately
5-6 songs/dances per movie. Songs are also
5-10 minutes in length. - In 2002 more than 1200 films were produced.
- On average Bollywood produces more than 1000
films a year. - Include many plots love triangles, comedy,
- and dare-devil thrills -- all are mixed up in a
- three hour long extravaganza.
- Movie soundtracks are released sometimes
- even before the movie is released.
18- Why musicals? See next slide
- Songs and dances in
- popular Indian cinema
- are used as natural
- expressions of
- everyday emotions
- and situations.
- Indian cinema does not require that its
- performers act, dance, and sing they
- must merely act and dance.
19- Why musicals? Contd
- Has always been associated with Indian culture.
- Dates back to ancient India during introduction
of Sanskrit (first language of India). - Song and dance have been and are still associated
with many religions (eg. Hindu religion). (Two
clips played from Laagan/Tax) - Dramas or plays performed by religious members of
such faith contained song, music, and dance. - People would sing and dance in praise or hope of
rain to replenish crops. - Also associated with Punjabi culture.
- Two types of song and dance originating out of
Punjab are Bhangra and Giddha. (Clip played from
Asa Nu Maan Watna Da/We are proud of our
country). - Were performed hundreds of years ago and are
still performed today in hope and celebration of
a good harvest of crops.
20- Songs are sung by professional
- play-back singers that are pre-recorded and
lip-sung by dancing actors and actresses. - Playback singers are featured in the opening
credits. - Song lyrics are usually about love.
- Kissing is rarely seen within Indian films.
Considered a taboo within Indian culture, not
only within films but in public places. Song
lyrics and musical underscore within film allow
for such sexual and physical display to be
expressed without actually having to perform it
on screen. (Clip played from Hum Dil De Chuke
Sanam/I have already given my heart)
21- Each movie has its own theme song.
- Dialogue and song lyrics are often in Hindustani
vocabulary blend of Hindi and pure Urdu. - Many elegant and poetic Arabic and Persian
loan-words. - Renown male playback singers K. L. Saigal,
Kishore Kumar, Mohammed Rafi, Mukesh, and Manna
Dey.
22- Renown female playback singers Lata Mangeshkar
and her sister Asha Bhosle. - Lata made the Guinness World Records for singing
most songs Thirty-thousand
23- Music often borrowed from not only Indian
classical, folk, and devotional music, but also
from Japanese music (as in the film "Love in
Tokyo"), Persian music, and from Western music. - Film music is often set to large, Western-style
orchestras. Musical underscore for film is
created in the same manner as Western or
European films. - Instrumentalists do not get film credits.
- Instruments used to produce underscore bansuri,
dhol, harmonium, sitar, tabla, violin, grand
piano etc.
24Sitar
Tabla
Bansuri
Harmonium
Dhol
25BOLLYWOOD VS. HOLLYWOOD
- 1,013 FILMS PRODUCED
739 - 3.6 bil. TICKETS SOLD
2.6 bil. - 1.3 bil. WORLDWIDE REVENUES
51 bil. - 12.6 ANNUAL GROWTH RATE
5.6 - 1.5 mil AVG. PRODUCTION COST PER FILM
47.7 mil. - 500,000 AVG. MARKETING COST PER FILM
27.3 mil.
26- Greater number of tickets sold by Bollywood
- is explained by Indias population being far
- greater than U.S.As
- Smaller revenue generated by the
- Bollywood industry in comparison to the
- Hollywood industry is a result of excessive
- piracy of Indian films.
- Low production and marketing costs of
- Bollywood films is a result or lack of
- government funding and economic turmoil
- within India.
27Finances
- Indian government is not an active supporter of
lending out money to film companies. - Indian banks were often forbidden to lend out
money to film companies. - Film companies receive financial support from
private organizations. - Support is still very modest compared to
Hollywood standards.
28Highest paid Bollywood actress Aishwarya Rai
25 Million Rs. (Rupees) 625,000 Cdn. year.
Highest paid Bollywood actor Amitabh Bachchan
29- Most expensive movie ever made Devdas(2002)
- Highest grossing film Sholay
- Contact
-
- For more information
- Suraj Tandon
- B.Sc.(Hons)
- tandons_at_mcmaster.ca