Tripti Joshi (Editor)

Gangavataran

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
6.5
/
10
8
Votes
Alchetron6
6.5
8 Ratings
100
92
81
70
62
52
41
30
20
10
Rate This

Rate This

Duration
  

Music director
  
Vishwanathbuwa Jadhav

Language
  
MarathiHindi

Director
  
Dadasaheb Phalke

Running time
  
2h 14m

Country
  
British Raj

4bpblogspotcomvJMKTBeC9nMUbYJrX4eZgIAAAAAAA

Release date
  
1937 (1937)

Writer
  
Narayan Hari Apte, Dhundiraj Govind Phalke (dialogue), Dhundiraj Govind Phalke (screenplay)

Directors
  
Dadasaheb Phalke, Madhukar Bavdekar

Cast
  
Leela Mishra, Kusum Deshpande, Shankarrao Bhosle

Screenplay
  
Dadasaheb Phalke, Narayan Hari Apte

Similar movies
  
Related Dadasaheb Phalke movies

Gangavataran (English: The Descent of the Ganges) is a 1937 Indian film by Dadasaheb Phalke, who is known as the "father of Indian cinema". It was the first sound film and the last film to be directed by Phalke. When Phalke directed this film, he was 67 years old. He directed Gangavataran on behalf of Kolhapur Movietone.

Contents

Plot

Gangavataran is based on the tales of the Puranas, a genre of important Hindu, Jain and Buddhist religious texts. The film used special effects to show mythological miracles and fantasy scenes, credited to Babaraya Phalke, son of Dadasaheb. Gangavataran depicted the Hindu deity Shiva, and the divine sage from the Vaisnava tradition, Narada, played by Chitnis and Suresh Pardesi respectively.

The film tells the Hindu mythical story of river Ganges's descent to Earth. For absolution of his ancestor's sins Bhagiratha vows to bring the heavenly river (Ganga) to the Earth. Pleased with his tapasya, Lord Brahma agrees on sending Ganga. But He asks Bhagiratha to pursue Lord Shiva, as only Shiva could break Ganga's fall. Proud with her heavenly presence, Ganga agreed to descend only because of Brahma's orders. Her pride made her believe that her fall would only destroy the Earth. But then Shiva trapped her tight in His hair and only let her go when she asked for forgiveness. Her gentle flow after release then absolved Bhagiratha's ancestors.

Facts

It's an Indian film released in 1937 and directed by Dadasaheb Phalke.

This was Dadasaheb Phalke's last and only talk film of his career.

The film was screened on 6 August 1937 at the Royal Opera House in Mumbai. 

Production

It took two years to complete the production of Gangavataran. The production cost of this film was two and a half lakhs rupees in contemporary currency value. The film was screened on 6 August 1937 at the Royal Opera House in Mumbai. Gangavataran was the first Indian sound film to be screened at the Royal Opera House.

Analysis

Gangavataran was a mythological film. When Phalke directed this film, other filmmakers such as V. Shantaram were directing films with social reform as a thematic element. Gangavataran was a flop in the box office. Encyclopaedia of Hindi cinema describes Gangavataran as the "last desperate attempt" by Phalke to direct a film at a time when big-budget Hindi films were flourishing which were characterized by "rural romances with easy-to-follow dialogues, catchy songs, folk dances, dramas of misunderstanding" and the first pioneers of the Hindi film industry were quickly fading away from public memory.

References

Gangavataran Wikipedia
Gangavataran IMDb