Mumbai: The National Film Archive of India (NFAI) has obtained a 1930 black-and-white silent film Madhabi Kankan, shot by two foreign technicians, from Paris-based Cinematheque Francaise, Paris, a top official said on Wednesday.
This is the second Indian silent film to be found in recent years which added to the NFAI's meagre collection of 31 surviving films of the silent era when around 1,300 films were believed to have been made.
In 2018, it had acquired the footage of Bilwamangal (1919) from Cinematheque Francaise, NFAI Director Prakash Magdum said.
Madhabi Kankan (Agra Slavegirl) was produced by Madan Theatres Ltd, Kolkata and was directed by Jyotish Bannerjee. The film starred Nawab, Mumtaz Begum, Lalita Devi, Bhanu Bannerjee, Leelavati, Jainarayan Mukherjee and Farida Begum.
After the release, Madhabi Kankan was banned, then re-censored and released again in 1932, for reasons not clear, and only 13 minutes of its digitised footage now survives, said Magdum.
It was shot by two foreigners - Charles Creed and Marconi for Madan Theatres Ltd, which was one of the biggest companies during the silent films era, but nothing has remained in terms of its productions, barring the two aforementioned films.
Adapted from R.C. Dutt's famed Bengali novel, the plot of Madhabi Kankan revolved around the historical events of the 17th century when the sons of the Mughal Emperor Shah Jahan fought for his throne.