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Reel-time conservation

As public cinema bodies invite people to share rare film material for preservation; we speak with experts in the field to understand the type of uncommon that qualifies for archiving

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Agantuk is one of the Satyajit Ray films digitised by NFDC. Pic/Youtube

Agantuk is one of the Satyajit Ray films digitised by NFDC. Pic/Youtube

Being a habitual procrastinator, some phrasal verbs innocently provoke this writer. Sit on — is one such verb. Although a recent post on social media with the aforementioned words in its subhead felt personal, it rang out louder as a community call. The Pune-based National Film Archive of India (NFAI) has posted an invitation for the public to share rare film and non-film material for conservation under National Film Heritage Mission (NFHM).

Archiving information in paper or non-paper formats for long-time retention is essential. NFAI has been joined by National Film Development Corporation of India (NFDC) and Film Division of India (FDI) in Mumbai, and Satyajit Ray Film & Television Institute (SRFTI) in Kolkata among other centers. They have come together to expand India’s cinematic history. Ravinder Bhakar, managing director, NFDC, shares, “We are in the second phase of digitising 5,000 films under NFHM; of which, 1,400 have already been digitised. It is our request to groups and individuals to submit articles of value to us, as without the necessary skill and technological back-up, such data can get damaged beyond repair.” Bhakar informs that their latest project involved digitising 10 of Satyajit Ray’s films.

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