South Asian cinema

South Asian cinema refers to the cinema of Bangladesh, Bhutan, India, Maldives, Nepal, Pakistan and Sri Lanka.[1][2][3] The terms Asian cinema, Eastern cinema and Oriental cinema in common usage often encompass South Asia as well as East Asia and South East Asia.[2]

The Far East as a cultural block includes East Asia (green), Southeast Asia (blue) and South Asia (orange).

Styles and genres

The scope of South Asian cinema is huge and takes in a wide array of different film styles, linguistic regions and genres. South Asian cinema is particularly famous in the West for:

Regional industries

Bangladeshi cinema

  • Bangladeshi film industry, is the Bengali language film industry based in Dhaka, Bangladesh. The industry often generally referred to as Dhallywood, has been a significant film industry since the early 1970s. The 1960s, 1970s, 1980s and the first half of the 1990s were the golden years for Bangladeshi films as the industry produced many successful films. The industry has recently begun receiving international acclaim and many Bangladeshi films are getting released internationally.
  • Dhallywood, is a portmanteau of the words Dhaka and Hollywood.

Indian cinema

India contains many state languages which have film industries centered on them. Although Hindi is the official language of government business of northern regions of India, its often-used dialect Hindustani is the most widespread language but covering only 40% of the total population, and English is widely understood irrespective of region, the state languages are preserved for official use by different states in India, and many have as many speakers as an average European nation. Regional industries have also tended to produce a higher percentage of serious art film and political film. Bangladeshi cinema is filmed in Bengali and Sri Lankan cinema is filmed in Sinhala and Tamil. Last but not least is Indonesian cinema. In the beginning the Indonesian cinema grew after World War I, rooted from the Folk Theater Drama called Dardanela. Under Usmar Ismail, Indonesian cinema became the new entertainment in 1950 to 1980. Hundred of film stars were born, such as: Citra Dewi (1960), Tanty Yosepha (1970). Yenny Rachman and Christine Hakim (1980) and Dian Sastro (late 1990s). Teguh Karya was one of the leading Film Director in Indonesia after the era of Usmar Ismail. Now, by the popularity of television, film is replaced with electronic cinema which is popular as sinetron. This industry has made the Indian born producer, Raam Punjabi, a tycon of sinetron in Indonesia.

Nepali cinema

Pakistani cinema

Others

Some figures of South Asian cinema

Directors

Actors

Actresses

gollark: Hmm, so maybe if I want fixes for my code I need to post it as "REALLY COOL WALLPAPER GENERATOR PROGRAM DOWNLOAD NOW" and wait for someone to complain and *hopefully* nerd-snipe themselves into fixing it.
gollark: If I had a stroke, it would look like asklrasit qwuio58141uouqoqw4h3l4i34v2u3i5 25h23u5 23ui52u3bi5h2u5 23u5h2iou52, or possibly [nothing visible on discord because of randomly spasming or something and not really typing correctly], not ħħħħħ.
gollark: > mostly
gollark: Wait, wouldn't that either just end up hardcoding a big list of sites *or* end up just having to pull from search engines?
gollark: > also can you please pm me the connection finder tool (you write the username and it finds accounts of the same person on other sites)ħħħħħ

See also

Further reading

  • Contemporary Asian Cinema, Anne Tereska Ciecko, editor. Berg, 2006. ISBN 1-84520-237-6

References

  1. Dickey, Sara; Dudrah, Rajinder Kumar (2012). South Asian Cinemas: Widening the Lens.
  2. Teo, Stephen (2013). The Asian Cinema Experience: Styles, Spaces, Theory.
  3. Chaudhuri, Shohini (2005). Contemporary World Cinema: Europe, the Middle East, East Asia and South Asia.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.