Indian Cinema in Retrospect

$57
FREE Delivery
Quantity
Delivery Ships in 1-3 days
Item Code: IHK091
Publisher: Sangeet Natak Akademi
Author: R.M. Ray
Edition: 2009
ISBN: 8178717301
Pages: 335 (Illustrated Throughout In B/W)
Cover: Hardcover
Other Details 9.8 inch X 7.6 inch
Weight 1 kg
Fully insured
Fully insured
Shipped to 153 countries
Shipped to 153 countries
More than 1M+ customers worldwide
More than 1M+ customers worldwide
100% Made in India
100% Made in India
23 years in business
23 years in business
Book Description
From the Jacket

Indian Cinema in Retrospect contains within its covers contributions from some of the most notable figures in Indian film industry of the early post-independence period: B.N. Sircar, S.S. Vasan, V. Shantaram, Debaki Bose, Bimal Roy, Khwaja Ahmed Abbas, Devika Rani, Prithviraj Kapoor, Pankaj Mullick, Anil Biswas, Dilip Kumar, Nargis, Raj Kapoor, Durga Khote, David Abraham - to name only a few personages. Here they speak about every major aspect of cinema’s art, science, and industry, ranging from acting, direction, and production to financing and distributing films. In between are topics no less important such as script-writing, music and dance in films, cinematography, sound recording, and processing of films in the laboratory. Based on a seminar organized by Sangeet Natak Akademi, this book is an invaluable document on Indian cinema which has been unavailable to readers for a long time. Besides students of film, it will engage the attention of those with a lively interest in drama, dance, and music. Historians of modern India will find here a wealth of detail related to major themes.

R. M. Ray served as Regional Officer of the Central Board of Film Censors in Calcutta. An economist by training, he obtained his Ph.D from the School of Economics and Sociology, University of Bombay, in 1940. He was the Honorary Zone Secretary for Bengal in the Film Seminar of 1955.

Publisher’s Note

One of the first tasks of Sangeet Natak Akademi after it had been established in 1953 was to organize a series of all-India seminars focused on the arts it was to foster. The Film Seminar held in 1955 was the first of these events, to be followed by the Drama Seminar (1956), the Music Seminar (1957), and the Dance Seminar (1958). These seminars were designed to bring forth information on the practice of the performing arts and cinema in all parts of India, and to elicit opinion from the community of artists as to ways and means to encourage the growth of these arts. At a time when artists from different parts of the country seldom had the chance to meet and exchange views, the seminars organized by the Akademi helped both the newly-founded organization and the artist themselves to get to know better the lie of the land. For the first time in independent India, the seminars also made it possible for artists to make their recommendations to government for the furtherance of their arts.

To cineastes today, the Film Seminar may seem to be oddly placed among seminars on music, dance and drama, yet at the foundation of Sangeet Natak Akademi the cinema was included among the arts that the organization was to nurture of develop. In the popular perception, the film was an extension of drama, and that view may even be supported by an analysis of traditional Indian theatre and popular cinema. The Akademi seems to have gone along with that view in 1955. at any rate, cinema remained one of the concerns of the Akademi up to 1961, until which year it gave awards for direction, acting, screenplay, music and lyrics in films.

When it came to organizing the Film Seminar, Sangeet Natak Akademi did not betray any confusion with categories Film was a “distinct art form with a separate artistic individuality”, declared P.V. Rajamannar, the first Chairman of the Akademi. The planning and conduct of the seminar were placed almost entirely inn the hands of reputed artists and other professional of the film industry. As Joint and Executive Director of the seminar, Devika Rani Roerich played a key role in organizing the event, working in tandem with her co-joint Director Prithviraj Kapoor, the Director of the seminar B.N. Sircar, the Chairman of its Steering Committee Nityanand Kanungo, and the Akademi’s Chairman P.V. Rajamannar, to ensure adequate representation for every sector of the film industry and all the principal aspects of filmmaking. Zonal committees for Bengal, Bombay, Delhi and Madras took care of the regional representation. In other respects too, the seminar was an admirably well-structured exercise, and brought about an extensive and detailed discussion on the state of contemporary cinema.

Whether or not the Film Seminar eventually benefited Indian cinema may be a matter of conjecture. What is beyond and doubt is the value of the record of Indian film that the seminar has bequeathed us in the form of this report. Originally titled Film Seminar Report 1955, it was published by Sangeet Natak Akademi in 1956. Superbly edited by R.M. Ray, one of the distinguished participants. In editing the report, Dr Ray set a standard that cannot be bettered in the present day, therefore no change has been made in the text made available in this new edition. The report has been well known to students of Indian cinema in its older version, but is seen only in bibliographies of film literature today. Therefore we take pleasure in offering the content afresh to students of the cinema, and to all other readers interested in the history of India’s arts in the modern era.

Foreword to the First Edition

The preamble to the resolution of the Government of India (Ministry of Education) constituting the Sangeet Natak Akadami expressly declared its object to be to establish an organization to foster and develop Indian dance, drama (including film) and music and to promote through them the cultural unity of the country. In my very first speech as Chairman of the Akadami I made special reference to the film as a distinct art form with a separate artistic individuality and said that it will be one of the functions of the Akadami to set up high standards for this new art form without impairing its commercial value. To carry out the above object I moved a resolution before the General Council on the 25th March 1954 that a Seminar should be organized on “The future of Indian Films.” The resolution was passed unanimously, and Srimati Devika Rani Roerich and Sri Prithviraj Kapoor were appointed Joint Directors and entrusted with the conduct of the Seminar. In pursuance of this resolution the Directors, and in particular Srimati Devika Rani Roerich who acted as the Executive Director, proceeded to make arrangements for the conduct of the Seminar. They were fortunate in securing as the Chairman of the Seminar one of the most respected and distinguished personalities in the film world, Shri B.N. Sircar. The Executive Director made an exhaustive list of subjects relating to films (which is appended to this Report), and out of these a few only could be chosen. The further selection of persons to read papers and to open discussions was made by the ‘Executive Director whose intimate knowledge of the film world was of considerable help in this matter. Though there was initially a certain amount of prejudice about the Seminar mainly on account of a wrong impression that it was being organized by a Department of Government, when that impression was corrected and it was made clear that the Sangeet peared and there was hearty co-operation from the several leading persons who were requested to take part in the Seminar.

After a momentous inauguration by the Prime Minister on the 27th February 1955 the Seminar went on from day to day till the 4th March 1955. at the same table sat some of the most well known and experienced members of the film profession. Papers were read followed by lively discussion. There was however one special feature of the Seminar to which I have made reference elsewhere. That is this. Though there were discussions on the several subjects on which papers were read, no resolution as such was passed. This, I think, was most appropriate. In matters of art and culture there can be no hard and fast decisions, no dogmatic creed, and no binding injunctions. To give one example: Take a subject like the place of music in films. Though several views of the subject were placed before the Seminar with force and substance, it was obvious that no final resolution could be passed that there should or should not be music in films or that the music should be of a particular variety.

Both in the papers and in the discussions the main stress was on the aesthetic and cultural aspects of the film but inevitably subjects which did not directly deal with these aspects were also dealt with, as for instance, the technical, the social and the economic aspects. I say that this was inevitable because the film is not merely an art form. Its production is an industrial undertaking. The film is a social institution: it is a medium of education. The production of a film involves technical processes and requires highly complicated scientific apparatus and equipment. The commercial factors have an important bearing on the artistic development of the film. So it is you will find among the papers read at the Seminar such as “The Art of Sound Recording in a Film,” “Studio Management and Finance,” “Film Equipment,” “Motion Picture Photography,” “The Film Laboratory” and “Distribution, Exhibition and Publicity of Motion Pictures.”

Here is the report of the proceedings of the Seminar. All the papers read have been included in extensor. As already mentioned, each paper was followed by discussion. Though we would have liked to give a verbatim report of the entire discussion on each papers, it was impossible to do so chiefly on account of financial limitations. There was also the consideration that the volume would become very unwieldy. So the discussions had to be edited. Dr. Ray was entrusted with this difficult task and I gave him a little help in a general way. Care has been taken to see that all the points made by each speaker were brought out. Mere repartee and incidental digressions have been omitted.

I have no doubt that this Report will have more than topical importance. It will be a valuable contribution on the subject of the Film. Members of the film profession as well as the general public interested in the films will find it informing and interesting. It will, I believe, provide much food for thought, and I venture to say that the Government also will find it useful. It is the intention of the Akadami to publish later a review of the proceedings.

A short account of the receptions to the members of the Seminar has also been given as they serve to demonstrate the popularity and esteem enjoyed by the members of the film profession. I am sure the photographs will help the readers to have a vivid picture of the Seminar.

Our thanks are due to the Hosali Press, Bangalore, for bringing out the Report with care and attention, and to Mr. P. Spratt for revising the matter for the Press and preparing the Contents

Contents

Publisher’s Note 5
Foreword to the first edition by P.V. Rajamannar 13
Report by the Executive Director, Devika Rani Roerich 15
Inauguration 21
First Session
The Film as a Fine Art by Dr. P. V. Rajamannar 32
Our Industry by Shri B.N. Sircar 38
Second Session
Film Production in India Today by Shri S.S. Vasan 42
Discussion opened by Shri B.N. Reddi 54
Discussion continued by Shri Narendra Sharma 58
Discussion continued by Shri Dilip Kumar 59
Discussion continued by Shri David Abraham 59
Discussion continued by Shrimati Durga Khote 59
Discussion continued by Shri K.A. Abbas 60
Talk by Shri V.K. Krishna Menon 61
The Future of Information Films in India by Shri M. Bhavnani 63
Discussion opened by Shri Ajit Bose 67
Discussion continued by Shri K.A. Abbas 68
Third Session
The Tremendous Advance made in the Technique of Acting by Shrimati Suprova Mookerji 69
Discussion opened by Shrimati Durga Khote 73
Discussion continued by Kumari Nargis 74
Discussion continued by Shri Dilip Kumar 76
Discussion continued by Shri K.A. Abbas 76
Discussion continued by Shri Raj Kapoor 77
Discussion continued by Shri David Abraham 78
Discussion continued by Shri Kishore Sahu 79
Discussion continued by Shri S.S. Vasan 79
The Importance of Art Direction in a film by Shri M.R. Acharekar 80
Discussion opened by Shri Souren Sen 83
Discussion continued by Shri K.A. Abbas 84
Discussion continued by Shri Uday Shankar 84
Discussion continued by Shri Raj Kapoor 85
Fourth Session
Message from Chinese Delegation 86
The Responsibility of Indian Film Producers towards the Public for 87
Entertainment Films by Shri V. Shantaram
Discussion opened by Shri Debaki Kumar Bose 92
Discussion continued by Shri Narendra Sharma 96
Discussion continued by Shir Kishore Sahu 97
Discussion continued by Shrimati Suprova Mookerji 98
Discussion continued by Shri David Abraham 98
Discussion continued by Shri Uday Shankar 98
Discussion continued by Shri K.A. Abbas 98
Discussion continued by Shrimati Durga Khote 99
Discussion continued by Shrimati Pasupati Chattopadhyay 99
Discussion continued by Shri Dilip Kumar 99
Discussion continued by Shri S.S. Vasan 99
The Aesthetic and Artistic Value of Beautiful Costumes in Films by Shri Souren Sen 103
Discussion opened by Shri M.R. Acharekar 103
Discussion continued by Shri Raj Kapoor 103
Discussion continued by Shri Raj Kapoor 103
Discussion continued by Shri K.A. Abbas 103
Discussion continued by Shri R. Ranjan 104
Fifth Session
Independent Producers and Their Contribution to the Film Industry by Shri Kishore Sahu 105
Discussion opened by Shri Bimal Roy 110
Discussion continued by Shri Narendra Sharma 111
Discussion continued by Shri K.A. Abbas112
Discussion continued by Shri K.M. Modi 113
Discussion continued by Shri B.N. Reddi 113
Discussion continued by Shrimati Durga Khote 114
Discussion continued by Shri David Abraham 114
Discussion continued by Shri Raj Kapoor 114
Discussion continued by Shri Dilip Kumar 115
Discussion continued by Shir S.S. Vasan 115
Talk by Pandit H.N. Kunzru 115
The Art of Sound Recording in a film by Shri Madhu Sil 118
Discussion opened by Shri Marcus Bartley 131
Discussion continued by Shri Raj Kapoor 132
Discussion continued by Shri David Abraham 132
Discussion continued by Shri B.M. Tata 132
Sixth Session
Film Technicians: Their Place in the Industry and Their Problems
by Shri Pasupati Chattopadhyay
133
Discussion opened by Shri B.M. Tata 141
Discussion continued by Shri Debaki Kumar Bose 142
Discussion continued by Shri David Abraham 142
Discussion continued by Shri K.A. Abbas 143
Discussion continued by Shrimati Durga Khote 143
Discussion continued by Shri S.S. Vasan 144
Discussion continued by Shri Raj Kapoor 144
Motion Picture Photography by Shri Marcus Bartley 145
Discussion continued by Shri B.M. Tata 152
Discussion continued by Shri M.R. Acharekar 152
Discussion continued by Shri Souren Sen 152
Film Equipment: The Technical and Economic Problems of Manufacturing Film Equipment in India by Shri M.Akbar Fazalbhoy 153
Discussion opened by Shri B.M. Tata 158
Discussion continued by Shri Sen Gupta 158
Discussion continued by Shri B.N. Sircar 159
Discussion continued by Shri Souren Sen 159
Discussion continued by Shri Madhu Sil 159
Discussion continued by Shri S.S. Vasan 159
Discussion continued by Shri K.A. Abbas 160
Seventh Session
The Wealth of Indian Classical and Folk Music and its Place in Films by Shri Anil Biswas 161
Discussion opened by Shri Pankaj Mullick 165
Discussion continued by Shri Dilip Kumar 168
Discussion continued by Shri Narendra Sharma 168
Discussion continued by Shri R. Ranjan 168
Discussion continued by Shri S. S. Vasan 170
Discussion continued by Shri David Abraham 170
Discussion continued by Shrimati Durga Khote 170
Discussion continued by Shri K.A. Abbas 170
Indian Poets and Lyric Writing for Films by Shri Narendra Sharma 171
Discussion opened by Shri Probodh Kumar Sanyal 176
Eighth Session
Discussion continued by shri Dewan Sharar 178
Discussion continued by Shri S.S. Vasan 178
Discussion continued by Shri K.M. Modi 178
Discussion continued by Shri Raj Kapoor 179
Discussion continued by Shri P.V. Rajamannar 179
Discussion continued by Shri David Abraham 180
Discussion continued by Shri Anil Biswas 180
Discussion continued by Shri K.A. Abbas 180
The Film Actress and her Contribution to the Cultural and Social Life of India by Shrimati Durga Khote 181
Discussion opened by Shrimati Suprove Mookerji 185
Discussion continued by Kumari Nargis 186
Discussion continued by Shrimati Nomita Sinha 189
Discussion continued by Shri David Abraham 189
Discussion continued by Shri K.M. Modi 189
Discussion continued by Shri Narendra Sharma 189
Distribution, Exhibition and Publicity of Motion Pictures in India by Shri R.M. Seshadri 199
Discussion opened by Shri Baburao K. Pai 199
Discussion continued by Shri Akbar Fazalbhoy 200
Discussion continued by Shri S. S. Vasan 201
Discussion continued by Shri Narendra Sharma 202
Discussion continued by Shri David Abraham 202
Discussion continued by Shri Kishore Sahu 203
Ninth Session
Foreign Exhibition and Distribution by Shri Keki M. Modi 204
Discussion opened by Shri Baburao K. Pai 209
Discussion continued by Shri K.A. Abbas 213
Discussion continued by Shri Dewan Sharar 214
The Film Artist as the All Important Facet of the Film Industry by Shri David Abraham 214
Discussion opened by Shri Ahindra Chowdhuri 218
Discussion continued by Shri Dilip Kumar 221
Discussion continued by Shri Prithviraj Kapoor 225
Discussion continued by Shri K.A. Abbas 225
Discussion continued by Shri Narendra Sharma 226
Tenth Session
Talk by Shri V.K. Krishna Menon 228
The Message of Dance in Films by Shri Uday Shankar 235
Discussion opened by Shri R. Ranjan 240
Discussion continued by Shri B.M. Tata 242
Discussion continued by Shri Raj Kapoor 242
Discussion continued by Shri David Abraham 242
The Film Laboratory by Shri N.C. Sen Gupta 243
Discussion opened by Shri V. Ramaswamy 250
Discussion continued by Shri Pasupati Chattopadhyay 254
Discussion continued by Shrimati Durga Khote 254
Discussion continued by Shri Raj Kapoor 254
Discussion continued by Shri Dilip Kumar 254
Discussion continued by Shri Marcus Bartley 254
Eleventh Session
The Importance and Significance of a Good Film Story - Its Power
with the Masses by Shri K.A. Abbas
255
Discussion opened by Shri Probodh Kumar Sanyal 261
Discussion continued by Shri Kishore Sahu 264
Discussion continued by Shri Dilip Kumar 264
Discussion continued by Shri S. S. Vasan 264
Discussion continued by Shri Narendra Sharma 265
Discussion continued by Shri N. Bhavnani 265
Dialogue and Dialogue Writers by Shri K.A. Abbas 266
Discussion opened by Shri Probodh Kumar Sanyal 270
Discussion continued by Shri Dewan Sharar 273
Studio Management and Finance by Shri M.D. Chatterjee (read by Shri Ajit Bose)
Discussion opened by Shri Raj Kapoor 278
Discussion continued by Shri Dilip Kumar 279
Discussion continued by Shri S.S. Vasan 279
Concluding speech of thanks by Shrimati Devika Rani Roerich 280
Thanks to Shrimati Devika Rani Roerich by Shrimati Durga Khote 281
Thanks to Shri B.N. Sircar by Shri David Abraham 281
Concluding speech by Shri B.N. Sircar 282
APPENDICES
Messages i
Social Committee iii
Receptions iv
Publicity and Press Comments ix
Opinions of Members of the Film Seminar and Others xv
Subjects for Papers by Shrimati Devika Rani Roerich xxv
Who’s Who is the Film Seminar xliii
Frequently Asked Questions
  • Q. What locations do you deliver to ?
    A. Exotic India delivers orders to all countries having diplomatic relations with India.
  • Q. Do you offer free shipping ?
    A. Exotic India offers free shipping on all orders of value of $30 USD or more.
  • Q. Can I return the book?
    A. All returns must be postmarked within seven (7) days of the delivery date. All returned items must be in new and unused condition, with all original tags and labels attached. To know more please view our return policy
  • Q. Do you offer express shipping ?
    A. Yes, we do have a chargeable express shipping facility available. You can select express shipping while checking out on the website.
  • Q. I accidentally entered wrong delivery address, can I change the address ?
    A. Delivery addresses can only be changed only incase the order has not been shipped yet. Incase of an address change, you can reach us at help@exoticindia.com
  • Q. How do I track my order ?
    A. You can track your orders simply entering your order number through here or through your past orders if you are signed in on the website.
  • Q. How can I cancel an order ?
    A. An order can only be cancelled if it has not been shipped. To cancel an order, kindly reach out to us through help@exoticindia.com.
Add a review
Have A Question

For privacy concerns, please view our Privacy Policy