What's new

Kollywood --- Tamil Movie Industry

jnreno75

FULL MEMBER
Joined
Dec 7, 2012
Messages
157
Reaction score
0
Tamil cinema (also known as the Tamil film industry, the Cinema of Tamil Nadu or the Chennai film industry) is the Indian film industry based in Chennai, Tamil Nadu, India, dedicated to the production of feature films in the Tamil language. It is based in Chennai's Kodambakkam area, where several South Indian film production companies are headquartered. With reference to this, the industry sometimes called Kollywood, a portmanteau of Kodambakkam and Hollywood. Tamil cinema is India's third largest film industry in terms of films produced, as per the Central Board of Film Certification report of 2011,[1] with high revenues and worldwide distribution,[2] having audiences mainly from Tamil Nadu, Kerala, Karnataka and Andhra Pradesh making it one of the largest in the world. [3]
Silent films were produced in Chennai since 1892 and the era of talkies dawned in 1924 with the film Kalidas.[4] By the end of the 1930s, the legislature of the State of Madras passed the Entertainment Tax Act of 1939. Tamil cinema later had a profound effect on other filmmaking industries of India, establishing Chennai as a secondary hub for Telugu cinema, Malayalam cinema, Kannada cinema, and Hindi cinema.[5][6] In its modern era, Tamil films from Chennai have been distributed to various overseas theatres in Singapore, Sri Lanka, South Africa, Malaysia, Japan, Oceania, the Middle East, Western Europe, and North America.[7] The industry also inspired filmmaking in Tamil diaspora populations in other regions, such as in Europe and Canada.[8]
Film studios in Chennai are bound by legislation, such as the Cinematography Film Rules of 1948,[9] the Cinematography Act of 1952,[10] and the Copyright Act of 1957


Studios


AVM studios in Chennai, the oldest surviving studio in India
The year 1916 marked the birth of Tamil cinema with the first Madras production and South Indian film release Keechaka Vaadham produced and directed by R. Nataraja, who established the India Film Company Limited.(English: The Destruction of Keechaka).[24] During the 1920s, silent Tamil language film were shot at makeshift locations in and around Chennai, and for technical processing, they were sent to Pune or Calcutta. Later, some films featuring M. K. Thyagaraja Bhagavathar were shot in those cities as well.In 1935, A Ramaiah from Thanjavur established the first studio, Star Combines, in Kodambakkam. In the 1930s AVM set up its makeshift studioIndependent Tamil film production in places outside of India, including Sri Lanka, Singapore, Canada, and Europe, took prominence over the late-20th century. The history of filmmaking of Tamil language films in Canada dates back to the early 1990s. It is primarily based in the metropolitan region of the Greater Toronto Area in Southern Ontario.
Tamil films are also made in Sri Lanka where Tamil is one of the official languages since the ancient times. The film My Magic directed by Singaporean Eric Khoo became Singapore's first film to be nominated for the Palme d'Or at Cannes. Some of these films have involved one or more film personalities from the Chennai industry as well. in the town of Karaikudi, and during the same decade, full-fledged Movie studios were built in Salem (Modern Theatres Studio) and Coimbatore (Central Studios, Neptune, and Pakshiraja). By the mid 1940s, Chennai became the hub of studio activity with two more movie studios built in Chennai, Vijaya Vauhini Studios and Gemini Studios. Later, AVM Studios shifted its operations to Chennai. Thus, with the undivided Madras Presidency being the Capital to most of South India, Chennai became the center for Tamil- and Telugu-language films. Also, most of the pre-independence era drama and stage actors joined the film industry from the 1940s, and Chennai became the hub for South Indian–language film production and the cinema of Sri Lanka before independence.
 
sivaji-ganesan-s-karnan-movie-stills--43e44244.jpg


 
Last edited by a moderator:
What is market capital of Kollywood ?
 
220px-Veerapandya_Kattabomman.jpg


Veerapandiya Kattabomman (Tamil: வீரபாண்டிய கட்டபொம்மன்); also known as Kattabomman was an 18th century Palayakarrar ('Polygar') chieftain from Panchalankurichi of Tamil Nadu, India. His ancestors migrated to Tamil Nadu from areas in present day Andhra Pradesh during the Vijayanagar period. Also known as Kattabomma Naicker he was among the earliest to oppose British rule in these regions. He waged a war with the British six decades before the Indian War of Independence occurred in the Northern parts of India. He was captured and hanged in 1799 CE. His fort was destroyed and his wealth was looted by the British army. Today his native village Panchalankurichi in present day Thoothukudi district of Tamil Nadu and some polygars families migrated to vedal village in Kanchipuram District, India is a historically important site.[1]
Contents [hide]
1 Fight against British
2 Legend and folklore
3 Honor and Monuments
4 Movie
5 See also
6 References
7 External links
Fight against British

Kattabomman refused to accept the sovereighnty of British East India Company and opted to fight against them.[2] In 1799, he was captured by the British and hanged at Kayattar in Tirunelveli District, Tamil Nadu.[2] His younger brother, Umaidurai (known as Dumb boy, as he was deaf and mute) and other relatives were arrested and prisoned at Palayamkottai. In February 1801, Umaidurai escaped and mobilised local people to form an army and continued his fight till October 1801 when he and his companions in fight Chinna and Periya Marudu of Sivagangai were defeated and hanged by British.[2] The Panjalankuricci fort "was razed to ground, the site was ploughed over and sown with castor seed..(cited in Dircks 1993,22)[2]
Legend and folklore

In subsequent years, a good deal of legend and folklore developed around Kattabomman and the Marudu Brothers. Kayatharu, where Kattabomman was executed has remained a place of political pilgrimage.
In his Tinnevelly Gazetteer of 1917, H. R. Pate notes the presence, in Kayatharu, of "a great pile of stones of all sizes, which represents the accumulated offerings by wayfarers of the past hundred years. Folk songs recalling the heroism of the Poligar leaders remain alive in Tamil Nadu to this day..."
The popular Tamil slang for a traitor or committing treason is Ettapa or Ettapan, courtesy the Ettayapuram Polygar whom the British later conferred the title of Raja. But it is disputed whether Ettapan ever committed a treason at all because Kattabomman was arrested by the King of Pudukottai. The Campa Cola ground in Chennai belongs/belonged to Ettappan family. In recent times, there is an outcry over the unflattering portrayal of Ettappan in the 1959 Tamil language film, Veerapandiya Kattabomman, in which legendary Tamil thespian, Sivaji Ganesan, played the titular character. It was alleged that Ma.Po.Si (Ma.Po.Sivanyanam) who wrote the dialogues for the film had some misunderstanding with the descendants of Ettappan.


Veerapandiya Kattabomman postage stamp released on 16.10.1999 by India postage
220px-Veerapandiya_Kattabomman_postage_stamp.jpg



220px-Kattabomman_Memorial_at_Kayatharu.JPG


Kattabomman's story is celebrated in many legends and epic poetry in Tamil. Kattabomman is today recognised by the government as one of the earliest independence fighters opposing the British.
In 1974, the Government of Tamil Nadu constructed a new Memorial fort. The Memorial Hall has beautiful paintings on the walls depicting the heroic deeds of the saga which gives a good idea about the history of the period. A cemetery of British soldiers are also seen near the fort.
The remnants of the old fort are protected by the Archaeological Survey of India.
At Kayathar, near Tirunelveli on the present day NH7, the place where he was hanged, there is another memorial for Kattabomman.[3]
To commemorate the bicentenary on 16 October 1799 of Kattabomman’s hanging, the Government of India brought out a postal stamp in his honour.[4]
India's premier communication nerve centre of the Indian Navy, at Vijayanarayanam, about 40 km from here, is named as INS Kattabomman.[5]
Till 1997, the state transport buses of Tirunelveli District was named Kattabomman Transport Corporation.
Veerapandia Kattabomman Panpattu Kazhagam (Veerapandia Kattabomman Cultural association) is an organisation named in his honour.
The district administration celebrates `Veerapandia Kattabomman festival' at Panchalankurichi on his anniversaries.[6]
[edit]Movie

Main article: Veerapandiya Kattabomman (film)
Much of the modern currency of the legend comes from the 1959 motion picture starring Chevalier Sivaji Ganesan in lead role portraying the life of Veerapandiya Kattabomman. The Movie was directed by B.R. Panthulu and Nadigar Thilagam Sivaji Ganesan got a wide international recognition and earned many international awards for his epic performance and this particular film is one of the most remembered in his 45 years of filmdom. The film received ubiquitously positive reviews and adjudged the best film at the Cairo International Film Festival and Sivaji received the prize for best actor from Col. Nasser, the then president of Egypt
 
Dont know Buddy...May be i"ll talk to someone about it and let you know at the earliest...sure

What is market capital of Kollywood ?

Dont know buddy.....May be i"ll talk to someone and let you know at the earliest....sure

 
Last edited by a moderator:
What is market capital of Kollywood ?

Tamil film industry produces largest number of films after Hindi cinema. Tamils are too much film crazy, a Tamil friend of mine watched same movie 3-4 times if the movie stars Rajnikanth
 
Tamil film industry produces largest number of films after Hindi cinema. Tamils are too much film crazy, a Tamil friend of mine watched same movie 3-4 times if the movie stars Rajnikanth

Telugu movie industry releases most films after Bollywood..Tamil industry is third...but due to a bigger market than Telugu movie industry because of Tamil diaspora in Malaysia, Singapore, South Africa and Lanka, revenue wise it is the second largest...
 
bhaaga pirivinai ---- very nice movie --- want to watch...available in youtube...


Navarathiri superb movie --- sivaji ganesan in 9 diff getups..
 
Last edited by a moderator:
Telugu movie industry releases most films after Bollywood..Tamil industry is third...but due to a bigger market than Telugu movie industry because of Tamil diaspora in Malaysia, Singapore, South Africa and Lanka, revenue wise it is the second largest...
Second largest revenue wise ?
 
Rajaraja Cholan -- sivaji ganesan


historical movie
 
Last edited by a moderator:
Second largest revenue wise ?

Yeah...but sometimes it fluctuates..because one year there might be more hits in Telugu and more flops in Tamil.next year it might be the reverse..Im just generalizing.

And Tamil movies also have an extra market in Andhra..as most hit tamil movies are immediately dubbed into Telugu..but Telegu hit are rarely dubbed directly into Tamil..
 
Yeah...but sometimes it fluctuates..because one year there might be more hits in Telugu and more flops in Tamil.next year it might be the reverse..Im just generalizing.
And Tamil movies also have an extra market in Andhra..as most hit tamil movies are immediately dubbed into Telugu..but Telegu hit are rarely dubbed directly into Tamil..
In India naa ?
 
Back
Top Bottom