100
YEARS OF INDIAN CINEMA
When
Dadasaheb Phalke, the father of Indian Cinema, released his epochal feature
film Raja Harishchandra on 3rd May 1913, it is unlikely that either the
exhibitors or the pioneer film maker realized they were unleashing a mass entertainment
medium that would hold millions in sway for the next hundred years. The French
might have introduced the concept of moving images, but little did anyone know
that India would one day become the largest film industry in the world. It's a
miracle that Indian cinema has withstood the test of time despite the vast
cultural differences in the past 100 years.

The silent
era came to an end when Ardeshir Irani produced his first talkie, 'Alam Ara' in
1931. If Phalke was the father of Indian
cinema, Irani was the father of the talkie. The talkies changed the face of
Indian cinema. Apart from looks, the actors not only needed a commanding voice
but also singing skills, as music became a defining element in Indian cinema.
The year also marked the beginning of the Talkie era in South Indian films. The
first talkie films in Bengali (Jumai Shasthi), Telugu (Bhakta Prahlad) and
Tamil (Kalidass) were released in the same year.
50s and 60s
were considered as the Golden Age of Indian cinema. Filmmakers like Satyajit Ray,
Ritwik Ghatak, Guru Dutt, Bimal Roy, Mehboob Khan, K Asif, Raj Kapoor, KV
Reddy, L V Prasad and Ramu Kariat made waves in their respective film
industries and they went on to make classics like Pather Panchali, Madhumati,
Do Bheega Zameen, Shree 420, Awaara, Pyasa, Mother India, Mughal E Azam,
Mayabazar and Chemmeen among many other films. In the south, N.T. Rama Rao, M.
G. Ramachandran, Sivaji Ganesan, Rajkumar, Prem Nazir dominated the film
industry for more than three decades before making way for the next generation
of actors like Rajinikanth, Kamal Haasan, Mammootty, Mohanlal, Chiranjeevi and
Balakrishna
While Indian
commercial cinema enjoyed popularity among movie-goers, Indian art cinema did
not go unnoticed. Adoor Gopalakrishnan, Ritwik Ghatak, Aravindan, Satyajit Ray,
Shyam Benegal, Shaji Karun and several other art film directors were making
movies that gave India international fame and glory. The eighties saw the
advent of women film makers such as Vijaya Mehta ('Rao Saheb'), Aparna Sen
('36- Chouwringhee Lane', 'Parama'), Sai Pranjpye ('Chashme Baddoor', 'Katha',
'Sparsh'), Kalpana Lajimi ('Ek Pal'), Prema Karanth ('Phaniamma') and Meera
Nair ('Salaam Bombay'). It was also the decade when sultry siren Rekha wooed
audiences with her stunning performance in 'Umrao Jaan' in 1981.
As the world
has become a global village, the Indian film industry has reached out further
to international audiences. Apart from regular screenings at major
international film festivals, the overseas market contributes a sizeable chunk
to Bollywood's box office collections. Regular foreign Investments made by
major global studios such as 20th Century Fox, Sony Pictures, and Warner Bros
put a stamp of confirmation that Bollywood has etched itself on the global
podium.

Indian
cinema, despite all its peculiarities, has been a reflection of the
socio-economic, political and cultural changes that took place in the country.
Here's hoping that Indian movies continue to entertain us the way they've been
doing since 10 decades.
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