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Babubhai Mistry

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Other names
  
Babubhai Mistri

Died
  
December 20, 2010, Mumbai

Years active
  
1933-1991

Music director
  
Jai Dwarkadheesh

Name
  
Babubhai Mistry

Art directed
  
Role
  
Film director


Babubhai Mistry httpsiytimgcomvi2kM7QBoPz8hqdefaultjpg


Born
  
Occupation
  
film director, special effects director

Known for
  
special effects, mythological films

Awards
  
Zee Cine Award for Lifetime Achievement

Movies
  
Parasmani, Mahabharat, Sampoorna Ramayana, Hatim Tai, Bhagwan Parshuram

Similar People
  
Mahipal, Anita Guha, Homi Wadia, Fearless Nadia, BM Vyas

Interaction with Babhubhai Mistry.wmv


Babubhai Mistry (5 September 1918 – 20 December 2010) was an Indian film director and special effects pioneer who is best known for his films based on Hindu mythology, such as Sampoorna Ramayana (1961), Mahabharat (1965), and Parasmani (1963).

Contents

In 1999, Mistry received the Lifetime Achievement Award at the Zee Cine Awards. In 2009, he was honored "for his contribution to Bollywood as the master of special effects" at an event, "Immortal Memories," held to honor the "living legends" of the Hindi film industry.

Early life and education

Babubhai was born in saiyedpura area of Surat, Gujarat and studied until class four.

Career

Babubhai was a regular art director for various movies produced Wadia Movietone owned by JBH and Homi Wadia brothers along with Fearless Nadia. Here he discovered his penchant for handling camera and trick photography. He trained with Vijay Bhatt at Basant Pictures as a special effects director from 1933 to 1937. Khwab Ki Duniya (1937) came to him after Vijay Bhatt asked him to go and watch American film The Invisible Man (1933) and later asked whether he would be able to replicate them for a film, thus started his career in special effects. In fact his special effects in the film earned him the nickname Kala Dhaga (black thread) for the black threads he used in the film for performing various tricks. Thus Khwab Ki Duniya was the first film in which he was credited as "trick photographer". In the coming years, he also received acclaim for his effects in Basant Pictures' Hatimtai (1956) directed by Homi Wadia and Ellis Duncan's Meera (1954).

Mistry soon became a director and a cameraman. He started his directing career by co-directing his first two films, Muqabala (1942) and Mauj (1943) with Nanabhai Bhatt, both starred Fearless Nadia. Over the next four decades, he gathered stories from diverse religious, epical and language texts, such Puranas, and went on to direct over 63 fantasy, mythological and religious films, including Sampoorna Ramayana (1961), "a milestone in the history of Hindu mythology", Parasmani (1963) and Mahabharat (1965). Later, he also remained a consultant for Ramanand Sagar's television epic series, Ramayan (1987-1988). In 2005, at the annual MAMI festival he was awarded the Kodak Trophy for Technical Excellence for his contribution to Indian cinema.

Filmography

Director
  • Muqabala (1942)
  • Mauj (1943)
  • Sampoorna Ramayana (1961)
  • King Kong (1962)
  • Parasmani (1963)
  • Mahabharat (1965)
  • Bhagwan Parshuram (1970)
  • Daku Man Singh (1971)
  • Saat Sawal (1971)
  • Hanuman Vijay (1974)
  • Alakh Niranjan (1975)
  • Amar Suhagin (1978)
  • Har Har Gange (1979)
  • Sant Ravidas Ki Amar Kahani (1983)
  • Kalyug Aur Ramayan (1987)
  • Hatim Tai (1990)
  • Special effects
  • Khwab Ki Duniya (1937)
  • Aladdin Aur Jadui Chirag (1952)
  • Jungle Ka Jawahar 1953
  • Hatim Tai (1956)
  • Meera (1954)
  • Zimbo (1958)
  • Angulimaal (1960)
  • Guru (1980)
  • Cinematographer
  • Kaash (1993)
  • References

    Babubhai Mistry Wikipedia