Indian Film Industry more popularly known as Bollywood has gained a significant role in the social model of India, a new entertainment form dawned in India-the Cinema. The first exposure to motion pictures which India received was in 1896, when the Lumiere Brothers' Chinematographe unveiled six soundless short films at Watson Hotel, Esplanade Mansion, Bombay on July 7. And the first exposing of celluloid in camera by an Indian and its consequent screening took place in 1899, when Harishchandra Bhatvadekar (Save Dada) shot two short films and exhibited them under Edison's projecting kinetoscope.

The first International Film Festival of India held in early 1952 at Bombay had great impact of Indian Cinema. The big turning point camp in 1955 with the arrival of Satyajit Ray and his classic Pather Panchali which opened up a new path leading the Indian film to the World Film Scene. International recognition came to it with the Cannes award for best human document followed by an unprecedented crop of foreign and national awards. In Hindi Cinema too, the impact of neorealism was evident in some distinguished films like Bimal Roy's Do Bigha Zamin, Devadas and Madhumati, Rajkapoor's Boot Polish, Shri-420 and Jagte Raho, V. Shantharam's Do Aankhen Barah Haath and Jhanak Jhanak Payal Baaje, Mehbood's Mother India.

Today the Film Industry produces films for all the sections of society some providing Entertainment to the masses and some imparting social values to the people of India and rest of the world.Indian Film Industry has come a long way and is growing in vaue year after year.


Noida Film City
In order to boost the film industry in Uttar Pradesh, the thriving Film City of Noida was established in 1988 in consultation with celebrated film producers of Mumbai and Chennai. With a turnover of over Rs. 28 crore per annum, it has 21 plots covering approximately 98,600 sq.mtrs.



Bombay Film City
Mumbai is the hub of Indian film industry. Mumbai has played a pivoted role in the development of cinematography. The first feature film Raja Harishchandra was produced in the city by Dadasaheb Phalke, the father of Indian Cinema. Since then Mumbai has remained a main centre of Indian Film Industry for a period of a century.



Hyderabad Film City
The Film City, spread over 2,000 acres of land studded with hills, vales and lakes, has few parallels as both a tourist attraction and major film-making facility. The city looks like the result of a collaboration between P.C. Sorkar and Vishwakarma and is anytime a match to Universal Studios in Hollywood.