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  • ...y of moving pictures, the tents were soon replaced by regular, permanent [[cinema]] houses all over the country. ...taonline.com Calcutta] in [[1905]], [[Dabi Ghosh]] who worked for [[Aurora Cinema Company’s]] topical and so an..
    60 KB (10,019 words) - 18:17, 7 February 2009
  • Beginnings of Cinema in India ...thus became a reality. And so began the long and arduous journey of INDIAN CINEMA. The Phalke phenomenon was, by no means an isolated venture. It was the cul
    28 KB (4,665 words) - 03:19, 6 May 2006
  • Beginnings of Cinema in India ...us became a reality. And so began the long and arduous journey of [[INDIAN CINEMA]]. The Phalke phenomenon was, by no means an isolated venture. It was the c
    29 KB (4,743 words) - 09:52, 25 December 2011
  • ...f the artisan, so is Phalke of trimbak given the title of father of Indian cinema-my two obsessions. ...ned from Hindustan company, made his first announcement of retirement from cinema and retreated with his family to [[Kashi]] where he wrote [[Rangbhoomi]], a
    36 KB (5,567 words) - 11:20, 30 March 2009
  • ...in Watson Hotel by Mr Meris Sestiye - the representative of the pioneer of Cinema Industry - Lumie Brothers. That inspired him to make an experiment of a mov ...i Cinetone Limited was founded. This was the first limited company in the cinema industry. Godavari Cinetone Ltd, using the machinery of Dadasaheb, made a m
    9 KB (1,494 words) - 07:15, 1 March 2012
  • ...of the brief history of Indian cinema which also includes films about pre-cinema industrial arts and crafts related to the later development in motion-pictu ...riter participants from the work shop with printing, photography and early cinema they will be introduced to some philosophical historical texts relevant to
    9 KB (1,303 words) - 07:53, 8 July 2006
  • Himansu Rai is credited with bringing technical sophistication to Indian Cinema. He was amongst the earliest Indian filmmakers to collaborate with European
    4 KB (675 words) - 02:34, 26 April 2006
  • ...vernment charged a modest rental depending on the size and category of the cinema thus exploring the revenue earning potential off these films. While Mir was
    6 KB (938 words) - 02:45, 26 April 2006
  • ...Kashmiri whose enormous influence on the trends and conventions of Indian cinema has never been fully appreciated. Jamsetji's first two films therefore were
    5 KB (853 words) - 02:46, 26 April 2006
  • ...vernment charged a modest rental depending on the size and category of the cinema thus exploring the revenue earning potential off these films. While Mir was
    6 KB (938 words) - 02:49, 26 April 2006
  • ...in Watson Hotel by Mr Meris Sestiye - the representative of the pioneer of Cinema Industry - Lumie Brothers. That inspired him to make an experiment of a mov ...ri Cinetone Limited was founded. This was the first limited company in the cinema industry. Godavari Cinetone Ltd, using the machinery of Dadasaheb, made a m
    9 KB (1,493 words) - 16:22, 26 April 2006
  • ...in Watson Hotel by Mr Meris Sestiye - the representative of the pioneer of Cinema Industry - Lumie Brothers. That inspired him to make an experiment of a mov ...ri Cinetone Limited was founded. This was the first limited company in the cinema industry. Godavari Cinetone Ltd, using the machinery of Dadasaheb, made a m
    9 KB (1,493 words) - 23:40, 3 May 2006
  • ...eans; and why it has become the orthodox view of the development of Indian cinema in this period. By so doing I want to suggest three things: firstly the ris ...major step in conferring a degree of social and cultural legitimacy on the cinema that had hitherto been lacking.(29)
    33 KB (5,226 words) - 16:35, 26 April 2006
  • [[ HISTORY OF SOUND IN INDIAN CINEMA]] ...dream of having anything to do with the performing arts, least of all the cinema.
    14 KB (2,270 words) - 08:01, 3 May 2006
  • ...and spectacle, anticipated the modern Indian popular cinema; and like that cinema, it had its nerve-centre at Mumbai. ...n even into the 1950s. Their decline was partly due to the rise of popular cinema. Harder to explain is the marked decline, from the same period, in the Shak
    9 KB (1,371 words) - 05:56, 4 May 2006
  • ...and spectacle, anticipated the modern Indian popular cinema; and like that cinema, it had its nerve-centre at Mumbai. ...n even into the 1950s. Their decline was partly due to the rise of popular cinema. Harder to explain is the marked decline, from the same period, in the Shak
    9 KB (1,371 words) - 17:57, 26 April 2006
  • It was the age of mass reproduction and Victorian amusements. Cinema had arrived and so was plague spreading like fire. It was the Maharaja of B
    5 KB (911 words) - 13:35, 22 May 2009
  • The Firsts of Indian Cinema First Cinema Show
    23 KB (3,244 words) - 22:41, 26 April 2006
  • The Firsts of Indian Cinema First Cinema Show
    23 KB (3,244 words) - 23:08, 26 April 2006
  • ...fe and Passion of Jesus Christ is a remarkable relic from the very dawn of cinema. First released in 1902 by France’s Pathé film company, it was expanded
    5 KB (935 words) - 23:25, 26 April 2006
  • ...fe and Passion of Jesus Christ is a remarkable relic from the very dawn of cinema. First released in 1902 by France’s Pathé film company, it was expanded
    5 KB (935 words) - 23:27, 26 April 2006
  • "What is cinema?"
    10 KB (1,731 words) - 17:10, 14 November 2011
  • ...mism, a manifesto- already a dis satisfaction with the limted apparatus of cinema that seeks to capture movement and reproduce it through an illusion..
    2 KB (291 words) - 20:40, 8 October 2014
  • ...vernment charged a modest rental depending on the size and category of the cinema thus exploring the revenue earning potential off these films. While Mir was
    6 KB (938 words) - 23:47, 26 April 2006
  • ...diraj Govind Phalke, was, after a few years, to become dadasaheb of Indian Cinema, Chitrapat Maharishi.
    4 KB (632 words) - 20:59, 26 May 2006
  • ...proprietor, Dhundiraj Govind Phalke, became famous as dadasaheb of Indian Cinema a few years later.
    7 KB (1,162 words) - 02:40, 27 April 2006
  • '''The Sounds of Early Cinema''' Early Cinema
    695 KB (110,553 words) - 04:32, 27 April 2006
  • ...and spectacle, anticipated the modern Indian popular cinema; and like that cinema, it had its nerve-centre at Mumbai. ...n even into the 1950s. Their decline was partly due to the rise of popular cinema. Harder to explain is the marked decline, from the same period, in the Shak
    9 KB (1,371 words) - 05:35, 27 April 2006
  • ...nd some of the fundamental, and fundamentally philosophical, properties of cinema: movement, fragmentation, and time. ...ility...." (The Creative Mind 222-223). Bergson likens this process to the cinema apparatus. The camera begins with a real movement, breaks it down mechanica
    803 KB (128,263 words) - 16:43, 24 May 2006
  • ‘What is cinema?’ Saraswati asks Phalke, ‘What is cinema?’
    196 KB (33,860 words) - 23:45, 10 May 2006
  • [[victorian and cinema time line]] '''The Firsts of Indian Cinema'''
    23 KB (3,538 words) - 18:37, 22 February 2012
  • ...they wore out. In 1918, he settled in Bombay to build the famous Majestic Cinema with partner Khan Bhadur Ardeshir M. Irani. Alam Ara (Beauty of the World), ...they wore out. In 1918, he settled in Bombay to build the famous Majestic Cinema with partner Khan Bhadur Ardeshir M. Irani. Alam Ara (Beauty of the World),
    18 KB (2,931 words) - 07:30, 3 May 2006
  • ...fter the death of the father of Indian cinema. And how the man who brought cinema to India, ``One morning, February 16, 1944 on the banks of the Godavari qui ..., 5,131 wall posters, 1,752 disc records and 31 audio tapes in the form of cinema history through interviewing veterans on the evolution of the Indian film i
    7 KB (1,050 words) - 16:15, 4 May 2006
  • ...ike so many of the other early pioneers of cinema, he became attached to a cinema hall as an odd job man. He also simultaneously became an assistant photogra ...Vishnu Govind Damle and N D Sarpotdar all of whom became giants of silent cinema, fabricated a camera and started his first film. Sairandhari (1920)--anothe
    14 KB (2,483 words) - 16:25, 4 May 2006
  • ...of Tukaram's ascension to Vaikunth even by its naivete appeals to western cinema buffs. I had the privilege of presenting Sant Tukaram to a German group of ...age is one of the highest achievements of the early sound period of Indian Cinema. The film has charm and directness that sets it apart from other devotional
    10 KB (1,635 words) - 23:31, 23 June 2006
  • ...by him from his mother was passed on to his son Vikram Gokhale, the stage, cinema and TV artiste.
    3 KB (468 words) - 03:51, 6 May 2006
  • ...in Watson Hotel by Mr Meris Sestiye - the representative of the pioneer of Cinema Industry - Lumie Brothers. That inspired him to make an experiment of a mov
    2 KB (267 words) - 00:33, 16 June 2006
  • 59. [[Mehta]] - Manager of America India cinema house - 1912 63. [[Mr. Caboun]]—manager of ‘Bioscope’, a cinema weekly - 1912 - 1918 [[Caboun in a story]]
    13 KB (1,652 words) - 17:43, 10 February 2014
  • ...an idea of how daunting and in what dif¬ferent ways this father of Indian Cinema had to suffer mis¬fortune. In these dire circumstances, it was the compass ...e them a bonus equal to an year's salary and retired hon¬ourably from the cinema industry. A large-hearted director of a film company like him will not be b
    15 KB (2,602 words) - 18:19, 20 May 2009
  • '''CINEMA''' Cinema 3: Towards a Dialectical Film of the Cinema (Books)
    110 KB (17,694 words) - 16:11, 21 May 2006
  • ...dream of having anything to do with the performing arts, least of all the cinema. The somewhat negative perception of cinema's musical occupants, pervasive as it was, never quite influenced the classi
    13 KB (2,177 words) - 16:32, 22 May 2006
  • '''Cinema Ki Rani (1925)''' ...a howling dog are regarded as one of the most memorable moments of Indian cinema to date
    127 KB (20,817 words) - 08:24, 8 July 2006
  • '''The History of Sound in Indian Cinema''' ...rative and cinematic space, and are almost automatic ingredients of Indian cinema.
    61 KB (10,242 words) - 16:34, 22 May 2006
  • The Sounds of Early Cinema Early Cinema
    855 KB (137,726 words) - 17:02, 22 May 2006
  • ...nce I took to visual arts like painting, drawing, photography, theatre and cinema. ...ountain located at the centre, is indeed the first bathtub scene in Indian Cinema. The extent of sensuousness which Phalke has managed to infuse into this we
    7 KB (1,176 words) - 23:59, 16 July 2006
  • ...the first time by M/s Phalke and Company, the only first manufacturers of cinema films in India. All the eighteen workshops of the cinema are located on the premises.
    12 KB (1,629 words) - 14:59, 7 January 2014
  • ...course, a totally inadequate explanation of the illusion of motion in the cinema. The proposed fusion or blending of images could produce only the superimp In French writings on the cinema Roget often takes second place to the Belgian physicist Joseph Plateau, who
    33 KB (5,322 words) - 13:46, 27 May 2006
  • ...involved in flicker, as well as in the direct perception of motion and the cinema illusion. This delay is in addition to the effects of colours and brightnes
    61 KB (10,310 words) - 13:06, 25 May 2006
  • This was the debut film of V. Shantaram, one of the giants of Indian cinema. He played loard Krishna in the film.
    5 KB (794 words) - 14:53, 25 May 2006
  • ...and S.N. Patankar's 'Bhakta Prahlad'. When it was released at the West End cinema in Bombay the uncontrollable crowds were only satisfied when the theatre ma
    4 KB (734 words) - 12:49, 26 May 2006
  • Early pioneer of Indian cinema D.G. Phalke directs this tale about the hijinks of child god Krishna. After
    696 bytes (112 words) - 13:28, 26 May 2006
  • Early pioneer of Indian cinema D.G. Phalke directs this tale about the hijinks of child god Krishna. After
    699 bytes (112 words) - 13:44, 26 May 2006
  • ‘“Cinema.” ‘“What is Cinema?’
    3 KB (554 words) - 15:47, 5 March 2012
  • ...adasaheb was in Pune, he was chatting with his friend, the owner of Aryan cinema, Gangadharpant alias Bapusaheb Pathak. The question of Dadasaheb’s next m ...She was the first child artist doing a leading rold in the world of Indian Cinema. Other roles were done by: Nanda- Purushottam Parchure, Yashodha-Yadav Gopa
    5 KB (846 words) - 11:48, 28 February 2014
  • It was the age of mass reproduction and Victorian amusements. Cinema had arrived and so was plague spreading like fire. It was the Maharaja of
    5 KB (911 words) - 14:32, 10 June 2006
  • ...nstruction, to make the learning process more enjoyable. In all its forms, cinema is an art as well as a business, and those who make motion pictures take gr ...ker Georges Méliès was the outstanding creator of fantasy films in early cinema. Méliès exploited the new medium to enhance his magic acts through techni
    14 KB (2,263 words) - 14:52, 18 June 2006
  • B
    ...arrative dramatic films more prevalent, comedy remained a staple of silent cinema. After the trick films and risqué comedies of the early years, a new comic ...France, though no longer dominant, remained a center for theorizing about cinema and producing innovative and experimental works.
    8 KB (1,152 words) - 14:52, 18 June 2006
  • C
    ...oined such terms as photogenie and cinegraphie to express their views that cinema must emphasize images and their flow, rather than conventions used in the t ...Le ballet mécanique (1924) and Marcel Duchamp made Anémic Cinema (Anemic Cinema, 1926). A filmmaker who brought experimental ambitions to commercial featur
    8 KB (1,181 words) - 14:54, 18 June 2006
  • ...d well into the 20th century. Above is pictured a Kinephone, or gramophone cinema, from the 1920's. This was meant to be viewed using a 78 r.p.m. phonograph
    9 KB (1,578 words) - 01:28, 20 June 2006
  • William Jones translates Shakuntala into English. A [[dream of cinema]]
    2 KB (328 words) - 19:22, 10 February 2014
  • After the arrival of cinema, spectators got to sit before on a 'ship' before projections of moving phot
    18 KB (3,305 words) - 22:26, 28 July 2013
  • ...tself, song and dance has been an integral part of the narrative in Indian Cinema be it in any language or whichever genre often leading the Western world de Two other major Studios that left their mark on Indian Cinema in the 1930s and early 1940s were the Prabhat Film Company at Pune and the
    10 KB (1,673 words) - 23:32, 23 June 2006
  • ...paper from the pile and started to read it. It was a new paper called the Cinema news and property gazette which had just started that month (February).
    28 KB (5,686 words) - 11:55, 17 July 2006
  • Himansu Rai is credited with bringing technical sophistication to Indian Cinema. He was amongst the earliest Indian filmmakers to collaborate with European
    4 KB (692 words) - 16:07, 9 July 2006
  • It was the age of mass reproduction and Victorian amusements. Cinema had arrived and so was plague spreading like fire. It was the Maharaja of
    6 KB (1,001 words) - 09:37, 1 August 2006
  • Cinema ki Raani, same director, also stars her
    6 KB (909 words) - 03:01, 16 September 2010
  • This was the debut film of [[V. Shantaram]], one of the giants of Indian cinema. He played loard Krishna in the film.
    5 KB (839 words) - 18:10, 30 August 2006
  • women as lifesavers in action and the 1930's cinema [http://aditisen.blogspot.ca/2014/07/fight-like-woman.html] zebunissa, nadi ...eans; and why it has become the orthodox view of the development of Indian cinema in this period. By so doing I want to suggest three things: firstly the ris
    33 KB (5,268 words) - 00:14, 14 July 2014
  • Daughter of Dr. Phalke (Pioneer of Indian Cinema). Child actress till the age of ten, used to the limelight and grand exposu
    8 KB (1,391 words) - 12:17, 10 July 2006
  • ...d projecting them on a screen. He is, therefore, regarded as the father of cinema. The same year, a French inventor, L.A.A. Prince, also developed a camera. The year 1889 is an important one in the history of cinema. It was in this year that in India, a versatile engineer of Mumbai, Maadanr
    10 KB (1,762 words) - 10:05, 15 July 2006
  • ...course, a totally inadequate explanation of the illusion of motion in the cinema. The proposed fusion or blending of images could produce only the superimp In French writings on the cinema Roget often takes second place to the Belgian physicist Joseph Plateau, who
    35 KB (5,733 words) - 07:56, 8 July 2006
  • ...ctronic art modify the syntax of our -by now- traditional form of art, the cinema? ...dvent of the new image technologies; and then, following the path of early cinema’s evolution into the narrative form
    129 KB (20,642 words) - 22:48, 8 July 2006
  • ...variable in different traditions, and are a frequent subject of folklore, cinema, and contemporary fiction.
    30 KB (4,970 words) - 23:00, 8 July 2006
  • ...abited. In another of those numerous fin-de-siècle tropes that anticipate cinema, assisted or mechanized vision reveals signs of life, but it turns out to b ...ill “soon clear out of the novel all its reported dialogue,” while the cinema will deal with exterior events and accidents, leaving the way clear for the
    23 KB (3,676 words) - 10:18, 31 January 2012
  • ...er like his father and gave acting a try. In 1907, he founded a travelling cinema called the "Original Physograph Company" together with his brother Peter Os
    7 KB (1,094 words) - 16:14, 9 July 2006
  • ...ectronic art modify the syntax of our -by now-traditional form of art, the cinema? ...dvent of the new image technologies; and then, following the path of early cinema’s evolution into the narrative form
    17 KB (2,696 words) - 16:08, 19 June 2007
  • ...nce I took to visual arts like painting, drawing, photography, theatre and cinema.
    6 KB (771 words) - 22:43, 17 September 2013
  • ...not know what was going on in the house. His achievements in the field of cinema are well known, but one more aspect of his artistic nature was that he made
    2 KB (281 words) - 11:27, 10 July 2006
  • ...ers in other fields, whether related or not. For example, George Melies in Cinema and Jasper Maskelene in the art of Camouflaging for War. Is there something With all the larger-than-life special effects that are a mark of TV and cinema today, where do you see magic headed in the next 25 years? Do you think it
    15 KB (2,618 words) - 08:13, 11 July 2006
  • ...the world. Western influences crept into Indian music, and motion picture (cinema) changed it even further. Music was being converted to a form that everybod
    17 KB (2,812 words) - 09:09, 11 July 2006
  • ...the twentieth century is a most exciting period for the student of Indian cinema. It was the age of the pioneers. When the first Indian movie tycoon, [[Jams ...up an additional job at the age of sixteen. This was at the local tin-shed cinema, where, at a starting wage of Rs 5 per month, Shantaram did odd jobs, paint
    13 KB (2,319 words) - 12:12, 11 November 2007
  • ...an idea of how daunting and in what dif¬ferent ways this father of Indian Cinema had to suffer mis¬fortune. In these dire circumstances, it was the compass ...e them a bonus equal to an year's salary and retired hon¬ourably from the cinema industry. A large-hearted director of a film company like him will not be b
    3 KB (467 words) - 21:46, 14 July 2006
  • Encyclopaedia of Indian Cinema.
    5 KB (906 words) - 17:45, 17 July 2006
  • ...lke]] attends a screening of Life of Christ at [[P.B.Mehta's America-India Cinema]].
    10 KB (1,653 words) - 00:45, 5 December 2009
  • Cinema What is cinema?
    5 KB (872 words) - 14:35, 20 January 2021
  • ...defines the terms of censorship and cinema licensing. Phalke's [[Hindustan Cinema Films Co.]] is established. Patankar's [[Ram Vanvas]] is the first serial.
    2 KB (185 words) - 09:04, 30 August 2013
  • ...course, a totally inadequate explanation of the illusion of motion in the cinema. The proposed fusion or blending of images could produce only the superimp ...y of California Press, 1967 and 1971); George Sadoul, Histoire generale du cinema (Paris: Denoel, 1948); and George Potonniee, Les Origines du cinematographe
    12 KB (1,904 words) - 15:27, 17 July 2006
  • ...eleased Alam Ara, the first full-length Indian talkie film at the Majestic cinema in Bombay. This film very effectively broke the golden silent era and laid ...song and dance numbers. And much to the filmmaker's surprise, the Majestic cinema in Bombay where the film was released was mopbbed by surging crowds. Recall
    8 KB (1,392 words) - 18:45, 17 July 2006
  • ...and spectacle, anticipated the modern Indian popular cinema; and like that cinema, it had its nerve-centre at Mumbai. ...n even into the 1950s. Their decline was partly due to the rise of popular cinema. Harder to explain is the marked decline, from the same period, in the Shak
    9 KB (1,395 words) - 15:13, 17 July 2006
  • A Short History of Cinema ...lary of the logic of (paradoxical) sense informing the classical Hollywood cinema in its silent phase. In this series of shots, Buster's moving figure provid
    39 KB (6,179 words) - 15:19, 17 July 2006
  • ...his admirers write letters to Phalke requesting him to stage a comeback in cinema.
    3 KB (406 words) - 23:38, 13 July 2013
  • ...m by [[Hemedrakumar Roy]] and Atorthy's seminal writings on silent Bengali cinema. [[Mama Warerkar]] writes the play [[Satteche Gulam]].
    1 KB (226 words) - 02:49, 16 September 2010
  • ...ondon. [[R. Venkaiah]] and [[R. S. Prakash]] build Madras' first permanant cinema, the [[Gaiety]].
    1 KB (160 words) - 03:22, 31 July 2006
  • ...Akbar in Mughal-e-Azam, as the embodiment of Mughal royalty in Hindi-Urdu cinema. Invested his earnings in Hindi theatre, setting up the Prithvi Theatres in
    2 KB (319 words) - 18:49, 17 July 2006
  • Last days of the father of Indian cinema ...ns of Indian Cinema in May 1939 in Mumbai. Naturally, the father of Indian Cinema was invited to be the chief guest. My brother in law, one of the founders o
    8 KB (1,352 words) - 17:23, 16 February 2012
  • ...d come for rest and relaxation due to the discord with his partners in teh cinema industry. As he was senior to me in age, I would talk with him discreetly. ...write this play because of the alleged misbehaviour of his partners in the cinema business. But, truly, we did not think they did anything wrong.
    3 KB (626 words) - 21:29, 18 July 2006
  • ...kuntala as a young maiden, dressed up in royal splendour. My daughter, the Cinema, too grew up in poor circumstances. Now she is in the compay of princely pe ...recognise their own parents. That is what has happened to my daughter, the Cinema.
    4 KB (647 words) - 18:52, 14 December 2006
  • ...duced and directed so many movies. He was, after all, the father of Indian Cinema. ...d,"Toiling and struggling for twenty-five years, I brought glory to Indian Cinema, neglected my family, contracted illness by the stress of financial worries
    4 KB (727 words) - 17:38, 20 February 2012
  • After achieving fame in the field of cinema, Dada must have thought that he should do something in the field of drama,
    5 KB (856 words) - 18:47, 18 July 2006
  • After achieving fame in the field of cinema, Dada must have thought that he should do something in the field of drama,
    979 bytes (176 words) - 22:03, 18 July 2006

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