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  1. May 28, 2014 · Their film 'Sant Tukaram' was the first Indian film to win the Best Film Award at the Venice Film Festival in 1937. Like so many other great studios of the period, Prabhat Film Company closed down ...

  2. Website. www .prabhatfilm .com. Close. It was formed in Kolhapur, Maharashtra, India in 1929, towards the end of silent films' era, by the noted film director V. Shantaram, along with V.G. Damle, Keshav Rao Dhaibar, S. Fatelal and S.V. Kulkarni. The company moved to Pune in 1933, where it established its own studio and produced a total of 45 ...

  3. Sep 1, 2019 · Prabhat Film Company’s work is not really early Indian cinema, though we count it as “early cinema” as most of our silent films are lost (never preserved and not available today). Prabhat’s work represents some of the peak achievements of Indian cinema in the studio/early sound era of the 1930s and early 1940s, both in aesthetics and on technical terms.

  4. Video. Prabhat Film Company (1932-1949) Categories. Community content is available under CC-BY-SA unless otherwise noted. On a grey sunburst background, a girl with a white dress is seen standing on top of a monument with a shringa (Sanskrit for "horn"). She then raises the shringa and blows on it. A somber melody made by a shringa with a sitar.

  5. The present-day FTII campus was initially a land bought by the Prabhat Film Company way back in the year 1933. The company was founded in Kolhapur in 1929 and moved to Pune 4 years later. A stellar and pioneering film company of its time, it produced several important and iconic films such as Shejari, Sant Dyaneshwar and Sairandhri, which was the only colour film made by Prabhat.

  6. Remembering Prabhat Film Company which was one of the leading film producing companies in India. Prabhat Film Company was formed in Kolhapur, Maharashtra, In...

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  7. The film had a bigger budget allocated to it than Prabhat's Sant Tukaram (1936) made the following year. The original title Mahatma had to be changed due to the censors objection. Chandra Mohan's character was given a "nervous tic in one eye" to make him appear as an ordinary villain, and for expressionistic purposes Shantaram made use of "high-angle close-ups". [6]