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2025 proves to be a banner year for restored Indian classics

Published on: Sep 09, 2025 03:02 PM IST

In September alone, two digitally-enhanced restorations, of Sholay and Satyajit Ray’s Aranyer Din Ratri, premiered at the TIFF while Bimal Roy’s Do Bigha Zamin was screened at Venice film festival

Toronto: With the restored versions of three Indian classics featuring prominently at two major international film festivals within a period of a week, preservation of the country’s film heritage is having a banner year.

A still from the Indian cinema classic Sholay , as a restored version had a gala premiere at the ongoing 50th edition of Toronto International Film Festival. (Courtesy: Sippy Films)

While the cinematic epic Sholay premiered at the 50th edition of the Toronto International Film Festival (TIFF), as did legendary director Satyajit Ray’s Aranyer Din Ratri or Days and Nights in the Forests, Bimal Roy’s Do Bigha Zamin was showcased at the Venice film festival.

Sholay played to an audience in Toronto that reminded director Ramesh Sippy of its launch in India 50 years back in 1975. “It was an iconic screening, with so many, so many people,” said Shivendra Singh Dungarpur, director of the Mumbai-based Film Heritage Foundation (FHF), which spent years on the restoration for which much of the original material wasn’t available. But the final version which screened at TIFF actually added to the original release. It was a director’s cut, with deleted scenes and the original ending, which was removed in 1975 due to pressure from the government.

The Ray classic was among his lesser known but drew a similar appreciative audience. The Venice premiere of Do Bigha Zamin, made in 1954 and the first Indian film to win the Prix International at the Cannes Film Festival that year, featured several members of the director’s family.

There are several other challenges ahead for the foundation in its mission to presence film heritage as Dungarpur said, “It’s been a long journey and it was ten years now for the Foundation and we feel that there is so much of work to be done. Every day there’s a new chapter, new things.”

The foundation doesn’t just focus on the Hindi film industry will tackles projects across India’s various states, including classics in Manipuri, Bangla, Malayalam, Kannada and Oriya, among others. “We cannot limit ourselves to one region. We are very clear that it has to be through India. We have a very diverse culture and we need to so we try and choose those kind of films<’ Dungarpur said.

Their next “big” project is restoring Kamal Amrohi’s 1972 film Pakeezah. Another Ray classic, Kanchenjunga, made in 1962 and the director’s first colour feature, is also a forthcoming project.restoration work is also being undertaken by the National Film Development Corporation of India which had the digitally-enhanced version of Raj Kapoor’s Awara at TIFF in 2024.

 
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