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Raja Harishchandra (राजा हरिश्चंद्र), is a 1913 silent Indian film directed and produced by Dadasaheb Phalke, and is the first full-length Indian feature film [1]. The film was based on the legend of King Harishchandra, recounted in Ramayana and Mahabharata.
PlotThe film revolves around the noble and righteous king, Harishchandra, who first sacrifices his kingdom, followed by his wife and eventually his children to honour his promise to sage Vishwamitra. Though, in the end, pleased by his high morals, the Gods are pleased and restore his former glory, and further bestow him with divine blessings. ProductionPhalke was greatly influenced by the style of painter Raja Ravi Verma in the making of this film. The film had an all-male starcast, as no woman was available for playing female lead in the film, so the men played all the roles [2], and was 3700 feet long, roughly 40 minutes [3]. In 2008, 'Harishchandrachi Factory', a film based on the making of the film was announced, the title is based on the fact that, when the film was made, working in films was a taboo, so the Dada Saheb advised his artists to tell others, that they were working in the factory of one 'Harishchandra' [4]. PerformanceThe film was first shown in public on May 3, 1913 [5] at Bombay's Coronation Cinema, Girgaum, where crowds thronged roads outside the hall [2], as it marked the beginning of the Indian film industry. The film was so successful that Dada Saheb had to make more print, and even shown the film in rural areas. The film was a grand success and soon establish Phalke as a producer and paved way for the Indian film industry [3]. Extant PrintsThe original film was in four reels, and National Film Archive of India has only the first and last reels, though some film historians believe that they belong to a 1917 remake of the film, by the same name [6][7]. Cast
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