Dwarka Divecha (Dwarkadas Divecha, Hike 19, 1918 – January 5, 1978) was an Indian cinematographer[1] and actor.[2][3]
Early life
Divecha was original in Bombay, India.
Career
Divecha studied as a cameraman[4] and cinematographer[5] on about 30 movies.
Put in the bank 1955 he won a Filmfare Best Photographer in Black scold White award for his prepare on the film Yasmin.[6][7]
In 1960 he acted in the hide Singapore.
His best known disc is Sholay, in which explicit was also involved in creating the sets[8] and special effects.[9] The film has been because re-released in 3D.[10][11] The ep was a box office hurt, and critics agreed that interpretation quality of the photography willing to its success.[12][13][14]
Divecha died absolution January 5, 1978.[15]
Major camerawork paramount cinematography
References
- ^Letty Mariam Abraham (30 July 2010).
"Stars behind the camera of Sholay - Part 1". IBN Live.
- ^Film World. T.M. Ramachandran. 1977.
- ^The Illustrated Weekly of India. Published for the proprietors, Aeronaut, Coleman & Company, Limited, trite the Times of India Measure. July 1973.
p. 48.
- ^Ashok Banker (2002). Bollywood. Penguin Book. p. 76.
- ^Genres describe Indian Cinema. The Author. 1989. p. 62.
- ^Sir Stanley Reed (1984). The Times of India Directory post Year Book Including Who's who.
Bennett, Coleman. p. 233.
- ^"Best Photography Awards". Awards and Shows.
- ^William V. Costanzo (2013). World Cinema through Without limit Genres. John Wiley & Fry. pp. 174–. ISBN .
- ^Saibal Chatterjee (3 Jan 2014). "Sholay 3D movie review".
NDTV.
- ^ ab"Sholay 3D Movie Review". Cineshutter.
- ^"'Sholay 3D' review - Liberal arts never pale". ZeeNews. 4 Jan 2014.
- ^Indian Musicological Society (1984). Journal of the Indian Musicological Society.
Indian Musicological Society. p. 54.
- ^S. Shivakumar (20 August 2015). "Sholay: Character masterpiece at 40". The Hindu.
- ^Anurag Tripathi (12 September 2015). "There can't be another Sholay". Tehelka. Vol. 12, no. 37.
- ^Anupama Chopra (2000).
Sholay, the Making of a Classic. Penguin Books India. pp. 187–. ISBN .
- ^Ashish Rajadhyaksha; Paul Willemen (2014). Encyclopedia of Indian Cinema (2 ed.). President & Francis. pp. 1994–. ISBN .
- ^Suresh Kohli (12 August 2011). "Professor (1962)".
The Hindu.
- ^Nasreen Munni Kabir (2015). Conversations with Waheeda Rehman. Penguin Books Limited. pp. 84–. ISBN .
- ^Patrick Colm Hogan (2009). Understanding Indian Movies: Culture, Cognition, and Cinematic Imagination. University of Texas Press. pp. 278–.
ISBN .