Films in Search of a Movement

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A study of the history of the documentary film in South Asia, including the advances made after independence in Bangladesh, India, Pakistan and Sri Lanka.

Seated among the enthralled audience which had paid one rupee apiece for entry was Harishchandra Sakharam Bhatwadekar. He became so enamoured of the new art that within a couple of months he had made arrangements to screen shows of his own. He imported a motion picture camera from London for 21 guineas and made two films: one on a wrestling match and another on the training of monkeys by wandering minstrels. The films were sent to London for processing and screened in an open air theatre in Bombay in 1898. These, the first "topicals" or factual films to be shot in India, were the precursors to the documentaries that were to come later.

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Himal Southasian
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