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From PhalkeFactory
  • 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

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