Pro Tools
•Register a festival or a film
Submit film to festivals Promote for free or with Promo Packages

FILMFESTIVALS | 24/7 world wide coverage

Welcome !

Enjoy the best of both worlds: Film & Festival News, exploring the best of the film festivals community.  

Launched in 1995, relentlessly connecting films to festivals, documenting and promoting festivals worldwide.

Working on an upgrade soon.

For collaboration, editorial contributions, or publicity, please send us an email here

User login

|FRENCH VERSION|

RSS Feeds 

Martin Scorsese Masterclass in Cannes

 

 

 

Editor



Established 1995 filmfestivals.com serves and documents relentless the festivals community, offering 92.000 articles of news, free blog profiles and functions to enable festival matchmaking with filmmakers.

THE NEWSLETTER REACHES 171 000 FILM PROFESSIONALS EACH WEEK   (december 2023) .

Share your news with us at press@filmfestivals.com to be featured.  SUBSCRIBE to the e-newsletter.  
FOLLOW ME ON THE SOCIAL NETWORKS:              

 

MEET YOUR EDITOR Bruno Chatelin - Check some of his interviews. Board Member of many filmfestivals and regular partner of a few key film events such as Cannes Market, AFM, Venice Production Bridge, Tallinn Industry and Festival...Check our recent partners.  

The news in French I English This content and related intellectual property cannot be reproduced without prior consent.


feed

Tribute to Bollywood

BOLLYWOOD AND BEFORE

India has an extremely prolific film industry turning out anything between 700 and 800 films a year, with peaks sometimes reaching more than 900! (905 in 1985, for example.) Most of these films are produced in regional centres in languages such as Bengali, Tamil, Malayalam... Indeed India is made up of 22 States and has 17 main languages. The Bollywood term covers films produced in Hindi in the Bombay studios. Although such films only account for a quarter of the total Indian production, they are a model and the main source of national box-office hits. Film critic Bikram Singh wrote that Hindi films are for India what Hollywood films are for the rest of the world.

The Bollywood nickname was coined in the Seventies, although what it designates is much older. Right from the early days of cinema in India, Bombay was its main centre where the first Indian feature film was made in 1913, Dadasaheb Phalke's Raja Harishchandra. Yet the actual Bollywood genre was born in 1931 and prospered with the talkies. For Bollywood would not be Bollywood without songs. Like any other commercial film industry, Bollywood has gone through innovative periods (new genres, new ways to direct, new stars and sometimes genuine masterpieces) and periods of exhaustion. The first category includes the mid-Thirties (and P. C. Barua's Devdas) and the Fifties and the super productions (including Kamal Amrohi's Mugal-e-Azam, which took 9 years to be completed), major directors such as Raj Kapoor, Bimal Roy, Guru Dutt, Mehboob Khan, and the first international successes (Mehboob Khan's Mother India was nominated for an Oscar in 1957). The Seventies were also a prosperous decade with die-hard heroes played for example by Amitabh Bachchan in Ramesh Sippy's Sholay (1975), a huge success in the (would you believe it!) Western genre. Despite esthetic ups and downs, Bollywood continuously draws millions of viewers, both for emotional and narrative reasons (today Mother India and Sholay are still being shown to full houses).

The wonders of silent films

Bollywood loves songs, but it has a similar passion for narrative exuberance and melodrama. Bollywood films are crammed with divided then reunited families, revenge, falls from grace, redemption, impossible love affairs, as well as mutilations, tears and whippings. The exuberance is also found in the recycling of stories (Devdas was adapted 7 times for the silver screen!) or shameless plagiarism. This is because a Bollywood film has to be a three-hour affair: a recent hit such as Kuch Kuch Hota Hai is a copy of Grease until the intermission and then turns into Sleepless in Seattle! Bollywood's total lack of shame makes it possible for it to create the same wonders as silent films did, on both the superficial and deeper levels.

Links

The Bulletin Board

> The Bulletin Board Blog
> Partner festivals calling now
> Call for Entry Channel
> Film Showcase
>
 The Best for Fests

Meet our Fest Partners 

Following News

Interview with EFM (Berlin) Director

 

 

Interview with IFTA Chairman (AFM)

 

 

Interview with Cannes Marche du Film Director

 

 

 

Filmfestivals.com dailies live coverage from

> Live from India 
> Live from LA
Beyond Borders
> Locarno
> Toronto
> Venice
> San Sebastian

> AFM
> Tallinn Black Nights 
> Red Sea International Film Festival

> Palm Springs Film Festival
> Kustendorf
> Rotterdam
> Sundance
Santa Barbara Film Festival SBIFF
> Berlin / EFM 
> Fantasporto
Amdocs
Houston WorldFest 
> Julien Dubuque International Film Festival
Cannes / Marche du Film 

 

 

Useful links for the indies:

Big files transfer
> Celebrities / Headlines / News / Gossip
> Clients References
> Crowd Funding
> Deals

> Festivals Trailers Park
> Film Commissions 
> Film Schools
> Financing
> Independent Filmmaking
> Motion Picture Companies and Studios
> Movie Sites
> Movie Theatre Programs
> Music/Soundtracks 
> Posters and Collectibles
> Professional Resources
> Screenwriting
> Search Engines
> Self Distribution
> Search sites – Entertainment
> Short film
> Streaming Solutions
> Submit to festivals
> Videos, DVDs
> Web Magazines and TV

 

> Other resources

+ SUBSCRIBE to the weekly Newsletter
+ Connecting film to fest: Marketing & Promotion
Special offers and discounts
Festival Waiver service
 

User images

About Editor

Chatelin Bruno
(Filmfestivals.com)

The Editor's blog

Bruno Chatelin Interviewed

Be sure to update your festival listing and feed your profile to enjoy the promotion to our network and audience of 350.000.     

  


paris

France



View my profile
Send me a message
gersbach.net