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On
the historic midnight of Independence of August 14/ 15 1947,
India finally became independent. But there was no official
film unit of the Government of India to record the midnight
ceremonies and subsequent nationwide celebrations. It was
left mostly to newsreel cameramen of London, New York, Paris
and other cities to converge to New Delhi to record the events.
Dr. P.V. Pathy managed to coax Ambalal J. Patel, a multi-purpose
film unit with two cameras and sound equipment. Thus it was
left to 'Independents' to film Nehru's 'tryst with destiny'
speech along with international newsreel cameramen.
It
was in December 1947 that the Standing Finance Committee of
the Government of India approved of the scheme for the revival
of a film producing and distributing organization as a mass
media unit of the Ministry of Information and Broadcasting.
This was largely due to the wisdom and foresight of Sardar
Patel, then Home Minister who was also in charge of the Ministry
of I & B. So the decision was made by the Government to
revive the IFI but geared in a manner to fulfil the needs
of Independent India.
In April 1948 the Films Division was formed and described as 'the
official organ of the Government of India' for the production
and distribution of information films and newsreels.' The
Documentaries were to be released under the banner of 'Documentary
Films of India.' The newsreels were given the trade name of
'Indian News Review.' Mohan Bhavnani was appointed as Deputy
Controller of Documentaries in July 1948. Later he was re-designated
as Chief Producer (Documentaries). In the same month S.L.
Badami was appointed in charge of newsreels and he was also
re-designated as Chief Producer (Newsreels).
By
November 1948, most of the staff was recruited and the Films
Division started functioning. From June 1949, the Films Division
started regular distribution of newsreels and documentaries
through its own distribution set-up. Films were dubbed in
5 languages - English, Hindi, Bengali, Tamil and Telegu and
97 films were produced in 1949-50. Films Division soon became
one of the most important sources of public information and
tried to reach out to people in the remotest corners of India.
Its early work used imagery today considered typical of the
iconography of the Nehru era.
With
its centralized set-up, its huge infrastructure and
its weekly releases, the Public Sector had become
well entrenched in India. The Independents meanwhile
felt they should get together and consolidate their
position. If they banded together, they could demand
more effectively for the allocation of the production
of a certain number of films for the Private Sector
as was the case of the IFI and at better rates too.
Thus a handful of them met at the Cricket Club of
India in 1949 among them Paul Zils. Zils, a German
by birth, had worked under FW Murnau and had made
documentaries in Hollywood, Bali and Tokyo. After
the ship he was travelling in was torpedoed, the British
brought him to India. He got a berth in the IFI as
the head of its External Services Unit. When the IFI
closed down, Zils started the Documentary Unit of
India (DUI). PV Pathy joined him as cameraman Later
came Fali R. Bilimoria who became his professional
collaborator and partner in DUI and its successor
concern Art Films of Asia (AFA). Under the banner
of DUI and later AFA, they produced over 60 documentaries,
many of which were screened in International Film
Festivals at Edinburgh, Berlin, Cannes, Locarno etc.
and won awards as well. Some of their important films
are A Tiny Thing Brings Death, Mother,
Child, Community and A Village
in Travancore.
Special
mention must be made here of Burmah-Shell
one of the most enlightened sponsor of the short film. They
made a lot of training films, sales promotion films which
were strictly utilitarian. But they also made for prestige
value, films of outstanding merit. James A. Beveridge of the
National Film Board of Canada and a protege of Dr. John Grierson,
planned the Burmah-Shell Films.
In
1956, Ezra Mir
took over charge as Chief Producer of Films Division.
During his 5 year tenure, Films Division produced
over 400 documentaries.
The
coming of Jehangir Bhawnagary for a second time in 1965 (he
was earlier Deputy Chief Producer of Films Division from 1954
- 57) was like a shot in the arm. Many talents and exciting
films surfaced under him at Films Division - S.N.S. Sastry's
I am 20, Fali Bilimoria's The House That Ananda
Built, Sukhdev's India 1967 and M.F. Husain's Through
the Eyes of a Painter among others.
In
the 1980s Films Division, following the success of their three
hour film on the Asiad in New Delhi in 1982, undertook several
such long films like the Indo-Soviet co-production on Nehru,
a collaborative effort between Shyam Benegal
and the Soviet Director A. Aldokin. Benegal also made
a three hour documentary on Satyajit Ray,
one of India's greatest film directors. The post-Emergency
has also seen independent documentaries being made by 'Film
Activists.' These films focus attention on socio-economic
problems and have had to face much trouble from Governmental
Authorities. Though outside and well-known filmmakers have
made films for Films Division, the bulk of its enormous output
is in fact by in-house filmmakers.
With
the advent of video and particularly DV, today the entire
scenario of documentary filmmaking of India has changed. More
and more independent filmmakers and organizations are making
their own documentaries. While continuing to make documentaries,
Films Division organized the inauguaral International Film
Festival for documentaries, short films and animations in
both film and video formats at Mumbai in 1990, where much
of this work was seen along with short films, animations and
documentaries made internationally. The Festival, competitive
in nature, also includes retrospectives of Master Documentary
Filmmakers the world over and has an International Film Market
to help filmmakers sell their films. The Festival has become
so successful that it is now held every two years in Mumbai
with the 7th edition scheduled in February 2002.
Part
I
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