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Tamil cinema

Tamil cinema, also known as Kollywood is a part of Indian Cinema; primarily engaged in production of motion pictures in the Tamil language. Based out of the Kodambakkam neighbourhood in Chennai, Tamil Nadu, it is popularly called Kollywood - a portmanteau of the words Kodambakkam and Hollywood.[2][3][4][5] The first Tamil silent film, Keechaka Vadham, was directed by R. Nataraja Mudaliar in 1918.[6] The first Tamil talking feature film, Kalidas, a multilingual directed by H M Reddy was released on 31 October 1931, less than seven months after India's first talking motion picture Alam Ara.[7]

By the end of the 1930s, the legislature of the State of Madras passed the Entertainment Tax Act of 1939. Tamil film industry established in Madras (now Chennai), then became a secondary hub for Hindi cinema, other South Indian film industries, as well as for Sri Lankan cinema.[8] Over the last quarter of the 20th century, Tamil films from India established a global presence through distribution to an increasing number of regions in Singapore, Sri Lanka, Malaysia, Japan, the Middle East, parts of Africa, Oceania, Europe, North America and other countries.[9][10] The industry also inspired independent filmmaking among Tamil diaspora populations in Sri lanka, Malaysia, Singapore, and the west.[11]

History

Early exhibitors

 
Samikannu Vincent

M. Edwards first screened a selection of silent films at the Victoria Public Hall in Madras in 1897 during the British Raj. The selected films all featured non-fictional subjects; they were mostly photographed records of day-to-day events. The film scholar Stephen Hughes points out that within a few years there were regular ticketed shows in a hall in Pophams Broadway, started by one Mrs. Klug, but this lasted only for a few months. Once it was demonstrated as a commercial proposition, a Western entrepreneur, Warwick Major, built the first cinema theatre, the Electric Theatre, which still stands. It was a favourite haunt of the British community in Madras. The theatre was shut down after a few years. This building is now part of a post office complex on Anna Salai (Mount Road). The Lyric Theatre was also built in the Mount Road area. This venue boasted a variety of events, including plays in English, Western classical music concerts, and ballroom dances. Silent films were also screened as an additional attraction.[12] Swamikannu Vincent, a railway draftsman from Tiruchirapalli, became a travelling exhibitor in 1905. He showed short movies in a tent in Esplanade, near the present Parry's Corner, using carbide jet-burners for projection. He bought the film projector and silent films from the Frenchman Du Pont and set up a business as film exhibitor.[13] Soon, he tied up with Path, a well-known pioneering film-producing company, and imported projectors. This helped new cinema houses to sprout across the presidency.[14] In later years, he produced talkies and also built a cinema in Coimbatore.[15]

To celebrate the event of King George V's visit in 1909, a grand exhibition was organised in Madras. Its major attraction was the screening of short films accompanied by sound. A British company imported a Crone megaphone, made up of a film projector to which a gramophone with a disc containing prerecorded sound was linked, and both were run in unison, producing picture and sound simultaneously. However, there was no synched dialogue. Raghupathi Venkaiah Naidu, a successful photographer, took over the equipment after the exhibition and set up a tent cinema near the Madras High Court.[12] With this equipment, he screened the short films Pearl Fish and Raja's Casket in the Victoria Public Hall. When this proved successful, he screened the films in a tent set up in Esplanade. These tent events were the true precursors of the cinema shows. Venkiah travelled with this unit to Burma (now Myanmar) and Sri Lanka, and when he had gathered enough money, he put up a permanent cinema house in Madras—Gaiety, in 1914, the first cinema house in Madras to be built by an Indian. He soon added two more, Crown Theatre in Mint and Globe (later called Roxy) in Purasawalkam.

Swamikannu Vincent, who had built the first cinema of South India in Coimbatore, introduced the concept of "Tent Cinema" in which a tent was erected on a stretch of open land close to a town or village to screen the films. The first of its kind was established in Madras, called "Edison's Grand Cinemamegaphone". This was due to the fact that electric carbons were used for motion picture projectors.[16]

Most of the films screened then were shorts made in the United States and Britain. In 1909, an Englishman, T. H. Huffton, founded Peninsular Film Services in Madras and produced some short films for local audiences. But soon, hour-long films, which narrated dramatic stories, then known as "drama films", were imported. From 1912 onwards, feature films made in Bombay (now Mumbai) were also screened in Madras. The era of short films had ended. The arrival of drama films firmly established cinema as a popular entertainment form. More cinema houses came up in the city.

Fascinated by this new entertainment form, an automobile dealer in the Thousand Lights area of Madras, R. Nataraja Mudaliyar, decided to venture into film production. After a few days' training in Pune with the cinematographer Stewart Smith, the official cinematographer of Lord Curzon's 1903 Durbar, he started a film production concern in 1916.

The man who truly laid the foundations of south Indian cinema was A. Narayanan. After a few years in film distribution, he set up a production company in Madras, the General Pictures Corporation, popularly known as GPC. Beginning with The Faithful Wife/Dharmapathini (1929), GPC made about 24 feature films. GPC functioned as a film school and its alumni included names such as Sundara Rao Nadkarni and Jiten Banerji. The studio of GPC was housed in the Chellapalli bungalow on Thiruvottiyur High Road in Madras. This company, which produced the most Tamil silent films, had branches in Colombo, Rangoon and Singapore.

The Ways of Vishnu/Vishnu Leela, which R. Prakasa made in 1932, was the last silent film produced in Madras. Unfortunately, the silent era of south Indian cinema has not been documented well. When the talkies appeared, film producers had to travel to Bombay or Calcutta to make films. Most films of this early period were celluloid versions of well-known stage plays. Company dramas were popular among the Madras audience. The legendary Otraivadai drama theatre had been built in 1872 itself in Mint. Many drama halls had come up in the city where short silent films were screened in the afternoon and plays were enacted in the night.

The scene changed in 1934 when Madras got its first sound studio. By this time, all the cinema houses in Madras had been wired for sound. Narayanan, who had been active during the silent era, founded Srinivasa Cinetone in which his wife worked as the sound recordist. Srinivasa Kalyanam (1934), directed by Narayanan, was the first sound film (talkie) produced in Madras. The second sound studio to come up in Madras was Vel Pictures, started by M. D. Rajan on Eldams Road in the Dunmore bungalow, which belonged to the Raja of Pithapuram. Before long, more sound studios came up. Thirty-six talkies were made in Madras in 1935.

Influences

The main impacts of the early cinema were the cultural influences of the country. The Tamil-language was the medium in which many plays and stories were written since the ages as early as the Cholas. They were highly stylised and nature of the spectacle was one which could attract the people. Along with this, music and dance were one of the main entertainment sources.[17]

There is a strong Indian tradition of narrating mythology, history, fairy tales and so on through song and dance. Whereas Hollywood filmmakers strove to conceal the constructed nature of their work so that the realistic narrative was wholly dominant, Indian filmmakers made no attempt to conceal the fact that what was shown on the screen was a creation, an illusion, a fiction. However, they demonstrated how this creation intersected with people's day-to-day lives in complex ways.[18] By the end of the 1930s, the State of Madras legislature passed the Entertainment Tax Act 1939.

Studios

In 1916, a studio, the first in south India,[citation needed] was set up in Madras at 10 Millers Road, Kilpauk. He called it the India Film Company. Rangavadivelu, an actor from Suguna Vilasa Sabha, a theatre company then, was hired to train the actors. Thirty-five days later, the first feature film made in south India, The Extermination of Keechakan/Keechakavatham, based on an episode from the Mahabharata, was released produced and directed by R. Nataraja, who established the India Film Company Limited (The Destruction of Keechaka).[19]

Despite a century of increasing box office takings, Tamil cinema remains informal. Nevertheless, there are few exceptions like Modern Theatres, Gemini Studios, AVM and Sri Thenandal Films that survived beyond 100 productions.

Exhibitor strike 2017

In 2017, opposing the dual taxation of GST (28%) and entertainment tax (30%), Tamilnadu Theatre Owners Association announced indefinite closure of all cinemas in the state from 3 July 2017.[20][21] The strike has been called off and the cinemas will be playing the movies starting Friday 7 July 2017.[22][23][24][25] Government has formed a committee to decide on the existence of state's 30% entertainment tax. It's reported that, per day business loss during the strike was around ₹ 20 crores.

Distribution

Annual admissions in Chennai multiplexes and single screens averaged 11 million tickets with a standard deviation of ±1 million tickets during 2011–16. The Chennai film industry produced the first nationally distributed film across India in 1948 with Chandralekha.[26] They have one of the widest overseas distribution, with large audience turnout from the Tamil diaspora. They are distributed to various parts of Asia, Africa, Western Europe, North America and Oceania.[27]

Many successful Tamil films have been remade by other film industries. It is estimated by the Manorama Yearbook 2000 (a popular almanac) that over 5,000 Tamil films were produced in the 20th century. Tamil films have also been dubbed into other languages, thus reaching a much wider audience. There has been a growing presence of English in dialogue and songs in Chennai films. It is not uncommon to see movies that feature dialogue studded with English words and phrases, or even whole sentences. Some movies are also simultaneously made in two or three languages (either using subtitles or several soundtracks). Chennai's film composers have popularised their highly unique, syncretic style of film music across the world. Quite often, Tamil movies feature Madras Tamil, a colloquial version of Tamil spoken in Chennai.

Tamil film distribution territories

Territory Maximum Business (%)[clarification needed] Division
NSC 100 6 Northern districts – Cuddalore, Kanchipuram, Tiruvallur, Tiruvannamalai, Vellore and Viluppuram
Coimbatore 50 4 Western districts – Coimbatore, Erode, Nilgiris and Tiruppur
Chennai 37 1 Northern district – Chennai
MR 35 6 Southern districts – Dindigul, Madurai, Ramanathapuram, Sivaganga, Theni and Virudhunagar
TT 32 8 Central districts – Ariyalur, Karur, Nagapattinam, Perambalur, Pudukkottai, Thanjavur, Tiruchirappalli and Tiruvarur
Salem 28 4 Western districts – Dharmapuri, Krishnagiri, Namakkal and Salem
TK 13 3 Southern districts – Thoothukudi, Tirunelveli and Kanyakumari
Karnataka 83
Andhra Pradesh 79
Telangana 63
Kerala 63
Rest of India 15
USA and Canada 119
GCC 106
Malaysia 82
Rest of the world 89

The rest of India

Keechaka Vadham (1918) was the first silent film made in South India.[28] Kalidas (1931) was the first Tamil talkie film made in 1931.[29] Kalava was the first full-length talkie made entirely in Tamil.[30] Nandanar (1935) was the first film for American film director Ellis R. Dungan.[31] Balayogini released in 1937 was considered to be first children's film of South India.[32] It is estimated by the Manorama Yearbook 2000 (a popular almanac) that over 5,000 Tamil films were produced in the 20th century. Tamil films have also been dubbed into other languages, thus reaching a much wider audience. There has been a growing presence of English in dialogue and songs in Chennai films.

In 1991, Marupakkam directed by K.S. Sethu Madhavan, became the first Tamil film to win the National Film Award for Best Feature Film, the feat was repeated by Kanchivaram in 2007.[33] Tamil films enjoy significant patronage in neighbouring Indian states like Kerala, Karnataka, Andhra Pradesh, Maharashtra, Gujarat and New Delhi. In Kerala and Karnataka the films are directly released in Tamil but in Telangana and Andhra Pradesh they are generally dubbed into Telugu where they have a decent market.[34][35]

International

Tamil films have enjoyed consistent popularity among populations in South East Asia. Since Chandralekha, Muthu was the second Tamil film to be dubbed into Japanese (as Mutu: Odoru Maharaja[36]) and grossed a record $1.6 million in 1998.[37] In 2010, Enthiran grossed a record $4 million in North America.[38]

Many Tamil-language films have premiered or have been selected as special presentations at various film festivals across the globe, such as Mani Ratnam's Kannathil Muthamittal, Vasanthabalan's Veyyil and Ameer Sultan's Paruthiveeran. Kanchivaram (2009) was selected to be premiered at the Toronto International Film Festival. Tamil films have been a part of films submitted by India for the Academy Award for Best Foreign Language on eight occasions, next only to Hindi.[39] Mani Ratnam's Nayakan (1987) was included in Time magazine's "All-TIME" 100 best movies list.[40]

Economics

Average annual film output in Tamil film industry peaked in 1985. The Tamil film market accounts for approximately 0.1% of the gross domestic product (GDP) of the state of Tamil Nadu.[41] For the purpose of entertainment taxes, returns have to be filed by the exhibitors weekly (usually each Tuesday).[42]

The Government of Tamil Nadu made provisions for an entertainment tax exemption for Tamil films having titles in words from the Tamil-language only.[43] This is in accordance with Government Order 72 passed on 22 July 2006. The first film to be released after the new Order was Unakkum Enakkum. The original title had been Something Something Unakkum Ennakkum, a half-English and a half-Tamil title.[43] In July 2011, strict norms on entertainment tax were passed which stated that films which were given a "U" certificate by the Central Board of Film Certification alone were eligible for tax exemption and those with an "A" certificate could not fit into this category.[44]

There are three major roles in the Tamil film value chain viz producer, distributor and exhibitor.[45] The distributor purchases theatrical distribution rights from the producer for exhibiting the film in a defined territory. The distributor performs enhanced functions such as:

  1. part-financing of film (in case of minimum guarantee / advance based purchase of film rights)
  2. localised marketing of film
  3. selection of exhibition halls
  4. managing the logistics of physical print distribution

There are three popular approaches to transfer of distribution rights via distribution contracts:

  1. Minimum Guarantee + Royalty – Here, the producer sells the distribution rights for a defined territory for a minimum lump sum irrespective of the box office performance of the film. Any surplus is shared between the producer and distributor, in a pre-set ratio (typically 1:2) after deducting tax, show rentals, commission, print costs and publicity costs. Effectively, the distributor becomes a financier in the eyes of the market. This is the most common channel available to high budget producers.
  2. Commission – Here, the distributor pays the producer the entire box office collection after deducting commission. So, the entire risk of box office performance of the film remains with the producer. This is the most common channel available to low budget producers. By the first decade of 21st century, about 90 per cent of the films were released on commission basis.[46]
  3. Outright Sale – Here, the producer sells all distribution and theatrical exhibition rights for a defined territory exclusively to a distributor. Effectively, the distributor becomes a producer in the eyes of the market. So, the entire risk of box office performance of the film remains with the distributor.

There are four popular approaches to transfer of exhibition rights via exhibition contracts:

  1. Theatre Hire – Here, the exhibitor pays the distributor the entire box office collection after deducting tax and show rentals. So, the entire risk of box office performance of the film remains with the distributor. This is the most common channel for low-budget films, casting rank newcomers, with unproven track record. In Chennai, a moderate theatre with AC and DTS can fetch around 1 lakh as weekly rent.[47]
  2. Fixed Hire – Here, the exhibitor pays the distributor a maximum lump sum irrespective of the box office performance of the film. Rental is not chargeable per show. Any surplus after deducting tax is retained by the exhibitor. Effectively, the exhibitor becomes a distributor in the eyes of the market. So, the entire risk of box office performance of the film remains with the exhibitor.
  3. Minimum Guarantee + Royalty – Here, the exhibitor pays the distributor a minimum lump sum irrespective of the box office performance of the film. Rental is not chargeable per show. Any surplus after deducting tax and show rental is shared in a pre-set ratio (1:2) between the distributor and exhibitor typically.
  4. Revenue Share – Here, the distributor shares with the exhibitor, in a pre-set ratio (typically 1:1), the entire box office collection of the film after deducting tax. Rental is not chargeable per show. So, the entire risk of box office performance of the film is shared between the exhibitor and distributor. This is the most common channel preferred by multiplex screens.

Highest-grossing Tamil films by year

Year Title Director Studio ref(s)
2022 Vikram Lokesh Kanagaraj Raaj Kamal Films International
2021 Master Lokesh Kanagaraj XB Film Creators [48]
2020 Darbar AR Murugadoss Lyca Productions [49][50]
2019 Bigil Atlee AGS Entertainment [51]
2018 2.0 S. Shankar Lyca Productions [52][53]
2017 Baahubali 2: The Conclusion S. S. Rajamouli Arka Media Works [54][55]
2016 Kabali Pa. Ranjith V.Creations [56][57]
2015 Baahubali: The Beginning S.S. Rajamouli Arka Media Works [58][59]
2014 Lingaa K.S. Ravikumar Lyca Productions [60]
2013 Vishwaroopam Kamal Haasan Raaj Kamal Films International [61]
2012 Thuppaki A.R. Murugadoss V. Creations [62][63]
2011 Mankatha Venkat Prabhu Red Giant Movies [64][65]
2010 Enthiran S. Shankar Sun Pictures [66]
2009 Ayan K.V. Anand AVM Productions [67]
2008 Dasavathaaram K.S. Ravikumar Aascar Film Pvt. Ltd [68]
2007 Sivaji S. Shankar AVM Productions [69]
2006 Varalaru K.S. Ravikumar NIC Arts
2005 Chandramukhi P. Vasu Sivaji Productions [70]
2004 Vasool Raja MBBS Saran Gemini Film Circuit [71]
2003 Saamy Hari Kavithalayaa Productions [72]
2002 Villain (2002 film) K.S. Ravikumar NIC Arts
2001 Dheena AR Murugadoss Vijayam Cine Combines [73]
2000 Vaanathaippola Vikraman Aascar Film Pvt. Ltd [74]
1999 Padayappa K.S. Ravikumar Arunachala Cine Creations [75]
1998 Jeans S.Shankar Amritraj Solomon Communications
1997 Arunachalam* Sundar C. Annamalai Cine Combines [76]
1996 Indian S.Shankar Sri Surya Movies
1995 Baashha Suresh Krissna Sathya Movies [77]
1994 Nattamai K.S. Ravikumar Super Good Films [78]
1993 Walter Vetrivel* P. Vasu Kamalam Movies [79]
1992 Annaamalai Suresh Krissna Kavithalayaa Productions [80]
1989 Apoorva Sagodharargal Singeetam Srinivasa Rao Raaj Kamal Films International [81]
1985 Padikkadavan* Rajasekhar Sri Eswari Productions [82]
1984 Nallavanuku Nallavan* SP. Muthuraman AVM Productions [77]
1982 Sakalakala Vallavan* SP. Muthuraman AVM Productions [83]
1981 Sattam Oru Iruttarai* S. A. Chandrasekhar Vadularan Combines [84]
1980 Billa (1980 film) R. Krishnamoorthy Suresh Arts [85]
1979 Kalyanaraman G.N.Rangarajan P.A.Arts [86][87]
1978 Sigappu Rojakkal Bharathiraja K.R.G. Productions [88]
1977 16 Vayathinile Bharathiraja S.A.Rajkannu [89][90]
1972 Vasantha Maligai K. S. Prakash Rao Vijaya Suresh Combines [91]
1971 Rickshawkaran* M. Krishnan Nair Sathya Movies [92]
1968 Thillana Mohanambal A. P. Nagarajan Sri Vijayalakshmi Pictures [93]
1966 Anbe Vaa* A. C. Tirulokchandar AVM Productions [94]
1965 Enga Veettu Pillai Tapi Chanakya Vijaya Vauhini Studios
1959 Veerapandiya Kattabomman B. R. Panthulu Padmini Pictures [95]
1958 Nadodi Mannan M G.Ramachandran MGR Pictures
1956 Madurai Veeran D. Yoganand Krishna Pictures [96]
1955 Missiamma* L. V. Prasad Vijaya Vauhini Studios [97]
1954 Malaikkallan S. M. Sriramulu Naidu Pakshiraja Studios [98]
1952 Parasakthi Krishnan–Panju P. A. Perumal Mudaliar [99]
1948 Chandralekha S. S. Vasan Gemini Studios

Legislation

Film studios in Chennai are bound by legislation, such as the Cinematography Film Rules of 1948,[100] the Cinematography Act of 1952,[101] and the Copyright Act of 1957.[102] In Tamil Nadu, cinema ticket prices are regulated by the government. Single screen theatres may charge a maximum of 50, while theatres with more than three screens may charge a maximum of 120 per ticket.[103]

Awards

See also

Notes

References

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Further reading

  • Arnold, Alison (2000). "Pop Music and Audio-Cassette Technology: Southern Area – Film music". The Garland Encyclopedia of World Music. Taylor & Francis. ISBN 978-0-8240-4946-1.
  • Bhaskaran, Theodore, Sundararaj (1996). Eye of The Serpent: An Introduction to Tamil Cinema. Chennai / University of Michigan: East West Books.
  • Gokulsing, K.; Moti Gokulsing, Wimal (2004). Indian Popular Cinema: A Narrative of Cultural Change. Trentham Books. p. 132. ISBN 1-85856-329-1.
  • Shohini Chaudhuri (2005). Contemporary World Cinema: Europe, the Middle East, East Asia and South Asia. Edinburgh University Press. p. 149. ISBN 0-7486-1799-X.
  • Chinniah, Sathiavathi (2001). Tamil Movies Abroad: Singapore South Indian Youths and their Response to Tamil Cinema. Vol. 8. Kolam.
  • Guy, Randor (1997). Starlight, Starbright : The Early Tamil Cinema. Chennai. OCLC 52794531.
  • Hughes, Stephen P. (25 February 2005). "Tamil Cinema as Sonic Regime: Cinema Sound, Film Songs and the Making of a Mass Culture of Music". New Perspectives on the Nineteenth and Twentieth Century. Keynote address: South Asia Conference at the University of Chicago. Chicago, Illinois.
  • Kasbekar, Asha (2006). Pop Culture India!: Media, Arts and Lifestyle. ABC-CLIO. ISBN 978-1-85109-636-7.
  • Ravindran, Gopalan (18 March 2006). Negotiating identities in the Diasporic Space: Transnational Tamil Cinema and Malaysian Indians. Cultural Space and Public Sphere in Asia, 2006. Seoul, Korea: Korea Broadcasting Institute, Seoul.
  • Nakassis, Constantine V.; Dean, Melanie A. (2007). "Desire, Youth, and Realism in Tamil Cinema". Journal of Linguistic Anthropology. 17: 77–104. doi:10.1525/jlin.2007.17.1.77. S2CID 145685533.
  • Velayutham, Selvaraj (2008). Tamil Cinema: The Cultural Politics of India's Other Film Industry. Routledge. ISBN 978-0-415-39680-6.

External links

  •   Media related to Tamil cinema at Wikimedia Commons

tamil, cinema, kollywood, redirects, here, other, uses, kollywood, disambiguation, other, uses, disambiguation, also, known, kollywood, part, indian, cinema, primarily, engaged, production, motion, pictures, tamil, language, based, kodambakkam, neighbourhood, . Kollywood redirects here For other uses see Kollywood disambiguation For other uses see Tamil cinema disambiguation Tamil cinema also known as Kollywood is a part of Indian Cinema primarily engaged in production of motion pictures in the Tamil language Based out of the Kodambakkam neighbourhood in Chennai Tamil Nadu it is popularly called Kollywood a portmanteau of the words Kodambakkam and Hollywood 2 3 4 5 The first Tamil silent film Keechaka Vadham was directed by R Nataraja Mudaliar in 1918 6 The first Tamil talking feature film Kalidas a multilingual directed by H M Reddy was released on 31 October 1931 less than seven months after India s first talking motion picture Alam Ara 7 Tamil cinemaNo of screens1671 Tamil Nadu and Pondicherry 1 Main distributorsAVM ProductionsModern TheatresNational PicturesSuper Good FilmsLyca ProductionsStudio GreenMadras Talkies2D EntertainmentSun PicturesAvni CinemaxThenandal Studio LimitedV CreationsWunderbar FilmsRed Giant MoviesAascar FilmsAGS EntertainmentProduced feature films 2019 Total254By the end of the 1930s the legislature of the State of Madras passed the Entertainment Tax Act of 1939 Tamil film industry established in Madras now Chennai then became a secondary hub for Hindi cinema other South Indian film industries as well as for Sri Lankan cinema 8 Over the last quarter of the 20th century Tamil films from India established a global presence through distribution to an increasing number of regions in Singapore Sri Lanka Malaysia Japan the Middle East parts of Africa Oceania Europe North America and other countries 9 10 The industry also inspired independent filmmaking among Tamil diaspora populations in Sri lanka Malaysia Singapore and the west 11 Contents 1 History 1 1 Early exhibitors 1 2 Influences 1 3 Studios 1 4 Exhibitor strike 2017 2 Distribution 2 1 Tamil film distribution territories 2 2 The rest of India 2 3 International 3 Economics 3 1 Highest grossing Tamil films by year 4 Legislation 5 Awards 6 See also 7 Notes 8 References 9 Further reading 10 External linksHistory EditEarly exhibitors Edit Samikannu Vincent M Edwards first screened a selection of silent films at the Victoria Public Hall in Madras in 1897 during the British Raj The selected films all featured non fictional subjects they were mostly photographed records of day to day events The film scholar Stephen Hughes points out that within a few years there were regular ticketed shows in a hall in Pophams Broadway started by one Mrs Klug but this lasted only for a few months Once it was demonstrated as a commercial proposition a Western entrepreneur Warwick Major built the first cinema theatre the Electric Theatre which still stands It was a favourite haunt of the British community in Madras The theatre was shut down after a few years This building is now part of a post office complex on Anna Salai Mount Road The Lyric Theatre was also built in the Mount Road area This venue boasted a variety of events including plays in English Western classical music concerts and ballroom dances Silent films were also screened as an additional attraction 12 Swamikannu Vincent a railway draftsman from Tiruchirapalli became a travelling exhibitor in 1905 He showed short movies in a tent in Esplanade near the present Parry s Corner using carbide jet burners for projection He bought the film projector and silent films from the Frenchman Du Pont and set up a business as film exhibitor 13 Soon he tied up with Path a well known pioneering film producing company and imported projectors This helped new cinema houses to sprout across the presidency 14 In later years he produced talkies and also built a cinema in Coimbatore 15 To celebrate the event of King George V s visit in 1909 a grand exhibition was organised in Madras Its major attraction was the screening of short films accompanied by sound A British company imported a Crone megaphone made up of a film projector to which a gramophone with a disc containing prerecorded sound was linked and both were run in unison producing picture and sound simultaneously However there was no synched dialogue Raghupathi Venkaiah Naidu a successful photographer took over the equipment after the exhibition and set up a tent cinema near the Madras High Court 12 With this equipment he screened the short films Pearl Fish and Raja s Casket in the Victoria Public Hall When this proved successful he screened the films in a tent set up in Esplanade These tent events were the true precursors of the cinema shows Venkiah travelled with this unit to Burma now Myanmar and Sri Lanka and when he had gathered enough money he put up a permanent cinema house in Madras Gaiety in 1914 the first cinema house in Madras to be built by an Indian He soon added two more Crown Theatre in Mint and Globe later called Roxy in Purasawalkam Swamikannu Vincent who had built the first cinema of South India in Coimbatore introduced the concept of Tent Cinema in which a tent was erected on a stretch of open land close to a town or village to screen the films The first of its kind was established in Madras called Edison s Grand Cinemamegaphone This was due to the fact that electric carbons were used for motion picture projectors 16 Most of the films screened then were shorts made in the United States and Britain In 1909 an Englishman T H Huffton founded Peninsular Film Services in Madras and produced some short films for local audiences But soon hour long films which narrated dramatic stories then known as drama films were imported From 1912 onwards feature films made in Bombay now Mumbai were also screened in Madras The era of short films had ended The arrival of drama films firmly established cinema as a popular entertainment form More cinema houses came up in the city Fascinated by this new entertainment form an automobile dealer in the Thousand Lights area of Madras R Nataraja Mudaliyar decided to venture into film production After a few days training in Pune with the cinematographer Stewart Smith the official cinematographer of Lord Curzon s 1903 Durbar he started a film production concern in 1916 The man who truly laid the foundations of south Indian cinema was A Narayanan After a few years in film distribution he set up a production company in Madras the General Pictures Corporation popularly known as GPC Beginning with The Faithful Wife Dharmapathini 1929 GPC made about 24 feature films GPC functioned as a film school and its alumni included names such as Sundara Rao Nadkarni and Jiten Banerji The studio of GPC was housed in the Chellapalli bungalow on Thiruvottiyur High Road in Madras This company which produced the most Tamil silent films had branches in Colombo Rangoon and Singapore The Ways of Vishnu Vishnu Leela which R Prakasa made in 1932 was the last silent film produced in Madras Unfortunately the silent era of south Indian cinema has not been documented well When the talkies appeared film producers had to travel to Bombay or Calcutta to make films Most films of this early period were celluloid versions of well known stage plays Company dramas were popular among the Madras audience The legendary Otraivadai drama theatre had been built in 1872 itself in Mint Many drama halls had come up in the city where short silent films were screened in the afternoon and plays were enacted in the night The scene changed in 1934 when Madras got its first sound studio By this time all the cinema houses in Madras had been wired for sound Narayanan who had been active during the silent era founded Srinivasa Cinetone in which his wife worked as the sound recordist Srinivasa Kalyanam 1934 directed by Narayanan was the first sound film talkie produced in Madras The second sound studio to come up in Madras was Vel Pictures started by M D Rajan on Eldams Road in the Dunmore bungalow which belonged to the Raja of Pithapuram Before long more sound studios came up Thirty six talkies were made in Madras in 1935 Influences Edit The main impacts of the early cinema were the cultural influences of the country The Tamil language was the medium in which many plays and stories were written since the ages as early as the Cholas They were highly stylised and nature of the spectacle was one which could attract the people Along with this music and dance were one of the main entertainment sources 17 There is a strong Indian tradition of narrating mythology history fairy tales and so on through song and dance Whereas Hollywood filmmakers strove to conceal the constructed nature of their work so that the realistic narrative was wholly dominant Indian filmmakers made no attempt to conceal the fact that what was shown on the screen was a creation an illusion a fiction However they demonstrated how this creation intersected with people s day to day lives in complex ways 18 By the end of the 1930s the State of Madras legislature passed the Entertainment Tax Act 1939 Studios Edit In 1916 a studio the first in south India citation needed was set up in Madras at 10 Millers Road Kilpauk He called it the India Film Company Rangavadivelu an actor from Suguna Vilasa Sabha a theatre company then was hired to train the actors Thirty five days later the first feature film made in south India The Extermination of Keechakan Keechakavatham based on an episode from the Mahabharata was released produced and directed by R Nataraja who established the India Film Company Limited The Destruction of Keechaka 19 Despite a century of increasing box office takings Tamil cinema remains informal Nevertheless there are few exceptions like Modern Theatres Gemini Studios AVM and Sri Thenandal Films that survived beyond 100 productions Exhibitor strike 2017 Edit In 2017 opposing the dual taxation of GST 28 and entertainment tax 30 Tamilnadu Theatre Owners Association announced indefinite closure of all cinemas in the state from 3 July 2017 20 21 The strike has been called off and the cinemas will be playing the movies starting Friday 7 July 2017 22 23 24 25 Government has formed a committee to decide on the existence of state s 30 entertainment tax It s reported that per day business loss during the strike was around 20 crores Distribution EditSee also List of Tamil language films Annual admissions in Chennai multiplexes and single screens averaged 11 million tickets with a standard deviation of 1 million tickets during 2011 16 The Chennai film industry produced the first nationally distributed film across India in 1948 with Chandralekha 26 They have one of the widest overseas distribution with large audience turnout from the Tamil diaspora They are distributed to various parts of Asia Africa Western Europe North America and Oceania 27 Many successful Tamil films have been remade by other film industries It is estimated by the Manorama Yearbook 2000 a popular almanac that over 5 000 Tamil films were produced in the 20th century Tamil films have also been dubbed into other languages thus reaching a much wider audience There has been a growing presence of English in dialogue and songs in Chennai films It is not uncommon to see movies that feature dialogue studded with English words and phrases or even whole sentences Some movies are also simultaneously made in two or three languages either using subtitles or several soundtracks Chennai s film composers have popularised their highly unique syncretic style of film music across the world Quite often Tamil movies feature Madras Tamil a colloquial version of Tamil spoken in Chennai Tamil film distribution territories Edit Territory Maximum Business clarification needed DivisionNSC 100 6 Northern districts Cuddalore Kanchipuram Tiruvallur Tiruvannamalai Vellore and ViluppuramCoimbatore 50 4 Western districts Coimbatore Erode Nilgiris and TiruppurChennai 37 1 Northern district ChennaiMR 35 6 Southern districts Dindigul Madurai Ramanathapuram Sivaganga Theni and VirudhunagarTT 32 8 Central districts Ariyalur Karur Nagapattinam Perambalur Pudukkottai Thanjavur Tiruchirappalli and TiruvarurSalem 28 4 Western districts Dharmapuri Krishnagiri Namakkal and SalemTK 13 3 Southern districts Thoothukudi Tirunelveli and KanyakumariKarnataka 83Andhra Pradesh 79Telangana 63Kerala 63Rest of India 15USA and Canada 119GCC 106Malaysia 82Rest of the world 89The rest of India Edit Keechaka Vadham 1918 was the first silent film made in South India 28 Kalidas 1931 was the first Tamil talkie film made in 1931 29 Kalava was the first full length talkie made entirely in Tamil 30 Nandanar 1935 was the first film for American film director Ellis R Dungan 31 Balayogini released in 1937 was considered to be first children s film of South India 32 It is estimated by the Manorama Yearbook 2000 a popular almanac that over 5 000 Tamil films were produced in the 20th century Tamil films have also been dubbed into other languages thus reaching a much wider audience There has been a growing presence of English in dialogue and songs in Chennai films In 1991 Marupakkam directed by K S Sethu Madhavan became the first Tamil film to win the National Film Award for Best Feature Film the feat was repeated by Kanchivaram in 2007 33 Tamil films enjoy significant patronage in neighbouring Indian states like Kerala Karnataka Andhra Pradesh Maharashtra Gujarat and New Delhi In Kerala and Karnataka the films are directly released in Tamil but in Telangana and Andhra Pradesh they are generally dubbed into Telugu where they have a decent market 34 35 International Edit Tamil films have enjoyed consistent popularity among populations in South East Asia Since Chandralekha Muthu was the second Tamil film to be dubbed into Japanese as Mutu Odoru Maharaja 36 and grossed a record 1 6 million in 1998 37 In 2010 Enthiran grossed a record 4 million in North America 38 Many Tamil language films have premiered or have been selected as special presentations at various film festivals across the globe such as Mani Ratnam s Kannathil Muthamittal Vasanthabalan s Veyyil and Ameer Sultan sParuthiveeran Kanchivaram 2009 was selected to be premiered at the Toronto International Film Festival Tamil films have been a part of films submitted by India for the Academy Award for Best Foreign Language on eight occasions next only to Hindi 39 Mani Ratnam s Nayakan 1987 was included in Time magazine s All TIME 100 best movies list 40 Economics EditAverage annual film output in Tamil film industry peaked in 1985 The Tamil film market accounts for approximately 0 1 of the gross domestic product GDP of the state of Tamil Nadu 41 For the purpose of entertainment taxes returns have to be filed by the exhibitors weekly usually each Tuesday 42 The Government of Tamil Nadu made provisions for an entertainment tax exemption for Tamil films having titles in words from the Tamil language only 43 This is in accordance with Government Order 72 passed on 22 July 2006 The first film to be released after the new Order was Unakkum Enakkum The original title had been Something Something Unakkum Ennakkum a half English and a half Tamil title 43 In July 2011 strict norms on entertainment tax were passed which stated that films which were given a U certificate by the Central Board of Film Certification alone were eligible for tax exemption and those with an A certificate could not fit into this category 44 There are three major roles in the Tamil film value chain viz producer distributor and exhibitor 45 The distributor purchases theatrical distribution rights from the producer for exhibiting the film in a defined territory The distributor performs enhanced functions such as part financing of film in case of minimum guarantee advance based purchase of film rights localised marketing of film selection of exhibition halls managing the logistics of physical print distributionThere are three popular approaches to transfer of distribution rights via distribution contracts Minimum Guarantee Royalty Here the producer sells the distribution rights for a defined territory for a minimum lump sum irrespective of the box office performance of the film Any surplus is shared between the producer and distributor in a pre set ratio typically 1 2 after deducting tax show rentals commission print costs and publicity costs Effectively the distributor becomes a financier in the eyes of the market This is the most common channel available to high budget producers Commission Here the distributor pays the producer the entire box office collection after deducting commission So the entire risk of box office performance of the film remains with the producer This is the most common channel available to low budget producers By the first decade of 21st century about 90 per cent of the films were released on commission basis 46 Outright Sale Here the producer sells all distribution and theatrical exhibition rights for a defined territory exclusively to a distributor Effectively the distributor becomes a producer in the eyes of the market So the entire risk of box office performance of the film remains with the distributor There are four popular approaches to transfer of exhibition rights via exhibition contracts Theatre Hire Here the exhibitor pays the distributor the entire box office collection after deducting tax and show rentals So the entire risk of box office performance of the film remains with the distributor This is the most common channel for low budget films casting rank newcomers with unproven track record In Chennai a moderate theatre with AC and DTS can fetch around 1 lakh as weekly rent 47 Fixed Hire Here the exhibitor pays the distributor a maximum lump sum irrespective of the box office performance of the film Rental is not chargeable per show Any surplus after deducting tax is retained by the exhibitor Effectively the exhibitor becomes a distributor in the eyes of the market So the entire risk of box office performance of the film remains with the exhibitor Minimum Guarantee Royalty Here the exhibitor pays the distributor a minimum lump sum irrespective of the box office performance of the film Rental is not chargeable per show Any surplus after deducting tax and show rental is shared in a pre set ratio 1 2 between the distributor and exhibitor typically Revenue Share Here the distributor shares with the exhibitor in a pre set ratio typically 1 1 the entire box office collection of the film after deducting tax Rental is not chargeable per show So the entire risk of box office performance of the film is shared between the exhibitor and distributor This is the most common channel preferred by multiplex screens Highest grossing Tamil films by year Edit Year Title Director Studio ref s 2022 Vikram Lokesh Kanagaraj Raaj Kamal Films International2021 Master Lokesh Kanagaraj XB Film Creators 48 2020 Darbar AR Murugadoss Lyca Productions 49 50 2019 Bigil Atlee AGS Entertainment 51 2018 2 0 S Shankar Lyca Productions 52 53 2017 Baahubali 2 The Conclusion S S Rajamouli Arka Media Works 54 55 2016 Kabali Pa Ranjith V Creations 56 57 2015 Baahubali The Beginning S S Rajamouli Arka Media Works 58 59 2014 Lingaa K S Ravikumar Lyca Productions 60 2013 Vishwaroopam Kamal Haasan Raaj Kamal Films International 61 2012 Thuppaki A R Murugadoss V Creations 62 63 2011 Mankatha Venkat Prabhu Red Giant Movies 64 65 2010 Enthiran S Shankar Sun Pictures 66 2009 Ayan K V Anand AVM Productions 67 2008 Dasavathaaram K S Ravikumar Aascar Film Pvt Ltd 68 2007 Sivaji S Shankar AVM Productions 69 2006 Varalaru K S Ravikumar NIC Arts2005 Chandramukhi P Vasu Sivaji Productions 70 2004 Vasool Raja MBBS Saran Gemini Film Circuit 71 2003 Saamy Hari Kavithalayaa Productions 72 2002 Villain 2002 film K S Ravikumar NIC Arts2001 Dheena AR Murugadoss Vijayam Cine Combines 73 2000 Vaanathaippola Vikraman Aascar Film Pvt Ltd 74 1999 Padayappa K S Ravikumar Arunachala Cine Creations 75 1998 Jeans S Shankar Amritraj Solomon Communications1997 Arunachalam Sundar C Annamalai Cine Combines 76 1996 Indian S Shankar Sri Surya Movies1995 Baashha Suresh Krissna Sathya Movies 77 1994 Nattamai K S Ravikumar Super Good Films 78 1993 Walter Vetrivel P Vasu Kamalam Movies 79 1992 Annaamalai Suresh Krissna Kavithalayaa Productions 80 1989 Apoorva Sagodharargal Singeetam Srinivasa Rao Raaj Kamal Films International 81 1985 Padikkadavan Rajasekhar Sri Eswari Productions 82 1984 Nallavanuku Nallavan SP Muthuraman AVM Productions 77 1982 Sakalakala Vallavan SP Muthuraman AVM Productions 83 1981 Sattam Oru Iruttarai S A Chandrasekhar Vadularan Combines 84 1980 Billa 1980 film R Krishnamoorthy Suresh Arts 85 1979 Kalyanaraman G N Rangarajan P A Arts 86 87 1978 Sigappu Rojakkal Bharathiraja K R G Productions 88 1977 16 Vayathinile Bharathiraja S A Rajkannu 89 90 1972 Vasantha Maligai K S Prakash Rao Vijaya Suresh Combines 91 1971 Rickshawkaran M Krishnan Nair Sathya Movies 92 1968 Thillana Mohanambal A P Nagarajan Sri Vijayalakshmi Pictures 93 1966 Anbe Vaa A C Tirulokchandar AVM Productions 94 1965 Enga Veettu Pillai Tapi Chanakya Vijaya Vauhini Studios1959 Veerapandiya Kattabomman B R Panthulu Padmini Pictures 95 1958 Nadodi Mannan M G Ramachandran MGR Pictures1956 Madurai Veeran D Yoganand Krishna Pictures 96 1955 Missiamma L V Prasad Vijaya Vauhini Studios 97 1954 Malaikkallan S M Sriramulu Naidu Pakshiraja Studios 98 1952 Parasakthi Krishnan Panju P A Perumal Mudaliar 99 1948 Chandralekha S S Vasan Gemini StudiosLegislation EditFilm studios in Chennai are bound by legislation such as the Cinematography Film Rules of 1948 100 the Cinematography Act of 1952 101 and the Copyright Act of 1957 102 In Tamil Nadu cinema ticket prices are regulated by the government Single screen theatres may charge a maximum of 50 while theatres with more than three screens may charge a maximum of 120 per ticket 103 Awards EditFilmfare Awards South IIFA Utsavam Mirchi Music Awards South Toronto Tamil Film Festival SIIMA Awards Norway Tamil Film Festival Awards Tamil Nadu State Film Awards Vijay Awards International Tamil Film Awards Kalaimamani Edison Awards Ananda Vikatan Cinema Awards South Scope AwardsSee also EditCinema of the world Cinema of India Earliest color films in South India List of highest grossing Indian films List of Tamil actors List of Tamil film actors List of Tamil film actresses List of Tamil music directors Tamil cinema and Dravidian politicsNotes EditReferences Edit STATEWISE NUMBER OF SINGLE SCREENS Film Federation of India Retrieved 21 April 2014 Hiro Dilip 2010 After Empire The Birth of a Multipolar World p 248 ISBN 978 1 56858 427 0 Bureau Our Regional 25 January 2006 Tamil Telugu film industries outshine Bollywood Business Standard Retrieved 19 February 2012 China s Film Industry and Its Bollywood Future Forbes Tamil films give Bollywood a run for its money The Toronto Star 3 January 2013 Retrieved 30 March 2020 Metro Plus Chennai Madras Miscellany The pioneer Tamil film maker The Hindu Chennai India 7 September 2009 Archived from the original on 12 September 2009 Retrieved 29 June 2011 Velayutham Selvaraj 2008 Tamil cinema the cultural politics of India s other film industry p 2 ISBN 9780415396806 THE TAMIL NADU ENTERTAINMENTS TAX ACT 1939 PDF Government of Tamil Nadu Archived from the original PDF on 15 October 2011 Retrieved 26 September 2011 Pillai Sreedhar A gold mine around the globe The Hindu Retrieved 9 March 2017 Eros buys Tamil film distributor Business Standard Archived from the original on 3 September 2011 Retrieved 6 October 2011 With high demand for Indian movies Big Cinemas goes global The Times of India 12 June 2011 Retrieved 26 September 2011 SYMPOSIUM SRI LANKA S CULTURAL EXPERIENCE Chennai India Frontline Retrieved 26 September 2011 Celebration of shared heritage at Canadian film festival The Hindu Chennai India 9 August 2011 Retrieved 26 September 2011 a b Muthukumaraswamy M D Kaushal Molly 2004 Folklore public sphere and civil society p 116 ISBN 9788190148146 Pioneers in Indian Cinema Swamikannu Vincent Indiaheritage org Archived from the original on 9 May 2013 Retrieved 22 February 2013 Rajmohan Joshi 2006 Encyclopaedia of Journalism and Mass Communication Media and mass communication p 68 ISBN 9788182053663 Tamil Cinema India Times Archived from the original on 30 June 2015 Retrieved 29 June 2016 He brought cinema to South The Hindu Chennai India 30 April 2010 Archived from the original on 5 May 2010 Retrieved 26 September 2011 Abhinay Deo All stories can be found in Mahabharata and Ramayana Bollywood Movie News IndiaGlitz Retrieved 12 May 2011 Indian Films vs Hollywood Theviewspaper net 4 July 2008 Retrieved 12 May 2011 Velayutham Selvaraj 2008 India in Tamil silent era cinema Tamil Cinema The Cultural Politics of India s Other Film Industry Routledge p 156 ISBN 978 0 415 39680 6 IANS 30 June 2017 GST effect Tamil Nadu theatres to shut down from July 3 The Economic Times Archived from the original on 5 July 2017 Retrieved 7 July 2017 Tamil Nadu theatre owners go on strike after GST lose Rs 50 crore a day www 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Hindu Retrieved 2 December 2016 இத ந ள ல அன ற Dinamalar 12 August 2018 Retrieved 16 February 2022 Cinematograph film rules 1948 Government of India Retrieved 26 September 2011 Posters Central Board of Film certification CBFC Archived from the original on 23 November 2011 Retrieved 26 September 2011 INDIAN COPYRIGHT ACT 1957 PDF Government of India Retrieved 26 September 2011 Ashok Kumar S R 2 January 2007 Cinema ticket rate revision reflects a balancing act The Hindu Chennai India Archived from the original on 5 January 2007 Retrieved 18 January 2013 Further reading EditArnold Alison 2000 Pop Music and Audio Cassette Technology Southern Area Film music The Garland Encyclopedia of World Music Taylor amp Francis ISBN 978 0 8240 4946 1 Bhaskaran Theodore Sundararaj 1996 Eye of The Serpent An Introduction to Tamil Cinema Chennai University of Michigan East West Books Gokulsing K Moti Gokulsing Wimal 2004 Indian Popular Cinema A Narrative of Cultural Change Trentham Books p 132 ISBN 1 85856 329 1 Shohini Chaudhuri 2005 Contemporary World Cinema Europe the Middle East East Asia and South Asia Edinburgh University Press p 149 ISBN 0 7486 1799 X Chinniah Sathiavathi 2001 Tamil Movies Abroad Singapore South Indian Youths and their Response to Tamil Cinema Vol 8 Kolam Guy Randor 1997 Starlight Starbright The Early Tamil Cinema Chennai OCLC 52794531 Hughes Stephen P 25 February 2005 Tamil Cinema as Sonic Regime Cinema Sound Film Songs and the Making of a Mass Culture of Music New Perspectives on the Nineteenth and Twentieth Century Keynote address South Asia Conference at the University of Chicago Chicago Illinois Kasbekar Asha 2006 Pop Culture India Media Arts and Lifestyle ABC CLIO ISBN 978 1 85109 636 7 Ravindran Gopalan 18 March 2006 Negotiating identities in the Diasporic Space Transnational Tamil Cinema and Malaysian Indians Cultural Space and Public Sphere in Asia 2006 Seoul Korea Korea Broadcasting Institute Seoul Nakassis Constantine V Dean Melanie A 2007 Desire Youth and Realism in Tamil Cinema Journal of Linguistic Anthropology 17 77 104 doi 10 1525 jlin 2007 17 1 77 S2CID 145685533 Velayutham Selvaraj 2008 Tamil Cinema The Cultural Politics of India s Other Film Industry Routledge ISBN 978 0 415 39680 6 External links Edit Media related to Tamil cinema at Wikimedia Commons Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Tamil cinema amp oldid 1129124560, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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