21st National Film Awards
The 21st National Film Awards, presented by Directorate of Film Festivals, the organisation set up by Ministry of Information and Broadcasting, India to felicitate the best of Indian Cinema released in the year 1973.[1] Ceremony took place in October 1974 and awards were given by then Prime Minister of India, Indira Gandhi.
21st National Film Awards | |
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21st National Film Awards | |
Awarded for | Best of Indian cinema in 1973 |
Awarded by | Directorate of Film Festivals |
Presented by | Indira Gandhi (Prime Minister of India) |
Presented on | October 1974 |
Site | Vigyan Bhavan, New Delhi |
Official website | dff.nic.in |
Highlights | |
Best Feature Film | Nirmalyam |
Dadasaheb Phalke Award | Ruby Myers |
Most awards | • Ashani Sanket • Kaadu (3) |
Juries
Prior to 21st National Film Awards, there used to be regional committees at Bombay (Mumbai), Calcutta (Kolkata) and Madras (Chennai), the recommendations of which were then considered by central committee. To avoid this long-winded process, regional committees were discarded.
Two different committees were formed for feature films and short films, headed by Romesh Thapar and S. K. Kooka respectively.[1]
- Jury Members: Feature Films
- Romesh Thapar (Chairperson) • Usha Bhagat • Teji Bachchan • Ismat Chughtai • M. Yunus Dehlvi • Ashis Burman
- Firoze Rangoonwalla • Dina Pathak • B. V. Karanth • T. S. Pillai • T. K. Mahadevan • J. Swaminathan
- Dileep Padgaonkar • Subodh Mukherjee • U. Visweswar Raw • Asim Paul • Tarun Majumdar • Ananta Patnaik
- Illindula Saraswathi Devi • M. Bhaktavatsala • Sai Paranjpye • K. R. K. Menon • O. V. Vijayan
- Jury Members: Short Films
- S. K. Kooka (Chairperson) • Balwant Gargi • Nalni Soni • Komal Kothari
Awards
Awards were divided into feature films and non-feature films.
President's Gold Medal for the All India Best Feature Film is now better known as National Film Award for Best Feature Film, whereas President's Gold Medal for the Best Documentary Film is analogous to today's National Film Award for Best Non-Feature Film. For children's films, Prime Minister's Gold Medal is now given as National Film Award for Best Children's Film. At the regional level, President's Silver Medal for Best Feature Film is now given as National Film Award for Best Feature Film in a particular language. Certificate of Merit in all the categories is discontinued over the years.
Lifetime Achievement Award
Award | Awardee(s) | Awarded As | Cash Prize |
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Dadasaheb Phalke Award | Ruby Myers (Sulochana) | Actress | ₹20,000, a Gold medal and a shawl |
Feature films
Feature films were awarded at All India as well as regional level. For 21st National Film Awards, a Malayalam film Nirmalyam won the President's Gold Medal for the All India Best Feature Film; whereas a Bengali film Ashani Sanket and a Kannada film Kaadu won the maximum number of awards (three). Following were the awards given in each category:[1]
All India Award
Following were the awards given:[1]
Regional Award
The awards were given to the best films made in the regional languages of India. For feature films in English, Gujarati, Kashmiri, Meitei, Marathi, Oriya, Punjabi and Telugu language, President's Silver Medal for Best Feature Film was not given. The producer of the film was awarded with a Silver medal and ₹10,000, the director of the film was awarded with a Silver medal and ₹5,000, and leading actors were awarded with a souvenir.[1]
Award | Film | Awardee(s) | |||
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Producer | Director | Actor | Actress | ||
Best Feature Film in Assamese | Mamta | Nalin Dowerah | Eva Achow | Rudra Baruah | Nalin Dowerah |
Prafulla Dutta | |||||
Shiba Thakur | |||||
Best Feature Film in Bengali | Ashani Sanket | Sarbeni Bhattacharya | Satyajit Ray | Soumitra Chatterjee | Bobita |
Best Feature Film in Hindi | 27 Down | Awatar Krishna Kaul | Awatar Krishna Kaul | M. K. Raina | Raakhee |
Best Feature Film in Kannada | Abachurina Post Office | Patre C. Vinayak | N. Lakshminarayan | B. N. Narayan | Girija |
Best Feature Film in Malayalam | Gayathri | A. R. Shreedharan Elayidom | P. N. Menon | V. Raghavan | Jayabharathi |
P. B. Ashram | |||||
Best Feature Film in Tamil | Dikkatra Parvathi | M/s Navatarang | Singeetam Srinivasa Rao | Srikanth | Lakshmi |
Non-Feature films
Following were the awards given:[1]
Short films and Documentaries
Award | Film | Language | Awardee(s) | Cash Prize |
---|---|---|---|---|
Best Information Film (Documentary) | The Flame Burns Bright | English | Producer: Ashish Mukherjee | Silver Medal and ₹5,000 |
Director: Ashish Mukherjee | ||||
Best Educational / Instructional Film | Sath Kutch Na Jayega | Hindi | Producer: Dhiru Mistry | Silver Medal and ₹5,000 |
Director: Sureshwar Singh | ||||
Best Film on Social Documentation | Land of Krishna | English | Producer: G. L. Bhardwaj | Silver Medal and ₹5,000 |
Director: G. L. Bhardwaj | ||||
Best Promotional Film (Commercial) | Delhi the City Beautiful | English | Producer: Jagdish Banerjee | Silver Medal |
Director: Jagdish Banerjee | ||||
Best Promotional Film (Non-Commercial) | Fibre The Fabric of Life | English | Producer: Khadi and Village Industries Commission | Silver Medal |
Director: G. L. Bhardwaj | ||||
Best Experimental Film | Homi Bhabha - A Scientist in Action | English | Producer: Jagat Murari | Silver Medal and ₹5,000 |
Director: K. Vishwanath | Silver Medal and ₹4,000 |
Awards not given
Following were the awards not given as no film was found to be suitable for the award:[1]
Explanatory notes
- P. J. Antony (Leading Actor) and Sumithra (Leading Actress) were awarded with the souvenir.
- Amrish Puri (Leading Actor) and Nandini Bhaktavatsala (Leading Actress) were awarded with the souvenir.
- Geeta Siddharth (Leading Actress) was awarded with the souvenir.
References
- "21st National Film Awards" (PDF). Directorate of Film Festivals. Archived (PDF) from the original on 10 October 2019. Retrieved 2 September 2020.