Tamil cinema | |
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The iconic globular statue of AVM Productions, the oldest surviving studio in India
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No. of screens | 1546 (Tamil Nadu) |
Main distributors |
Ayngaran International AP International Aascar Films AVM Productions Kalaipuli Films Pyramid Saimira Lyca Productions |
Produced feature films (2014) | |
Total | 326 |
Gross box office (2013) | |
National films | India: ₹1,550 crore (US$240 million) |
Tamil cinema refers to Indian motion pictures produced in the language of Tamil. Based in the Indian state of Tamil Nadu, the hub of the Tamil film industry is in the Kodambakkam neighbourhood of Chennai. Kollywood is a colloquial term used to describe this industry, the word being a portmanteau of Kodambakkam and Hollywood. Tamil cinema has been described as the leading industry of South Indian cinema, and accounting for the second-largest global box office gross after Hindi cinema (also known as Bollywood) among all Indian film industries.
The first Tamil silent film, Keechaka Vadham, was made by R. Nataraja Mudaliar in 1918. The first talking motion picture, Kalidas, was a multilingual and was released on 31 October 1931, less than seven months after India's first talking motion picture Alam Ara. By the end of the 1930s, the legislature of the State of Madras passed the Entertainment Tax Act of 1939.
Tamil cinema later had a profound effect on other filmmaking industries of India, establishing Madras (now Chennai) as a secondary hub for Hindi cinema, other South Indian film industries, as well as Sri Lankan cinema. Over the last quarter of the 20th century, Tamil films from India established a global presence through distribution to an increasing number of overseas theatres in Singapore, Sri Lanka, Malaysia, Japan, the Middle East, parts of Africa, Oceania, Europe, and North America. The industry also inspired independent filmmaking in Tamil diaspora populations in Malaysia, Singapore, and the Western Hemisphere.