Alamgir Kabir (film maker)

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Alamgir Kabir
Independence Day Award (2010)[2]

Alamgir Kabir (26 December 1938 – 20 January 1989) was a Bangladeshi film director and cultural activist.[3] Three of his feature films are featured in the "Top 10 Bangladeshi Films" list by British Film Institute.[4]

Early life and education

Kabir was born on 26 December 1938 in

Oxford University at the age of 22.[1]

Career

During his stay in Oxford University he watched The Seventh Seal by Ingmar Bergman several times and became attracted to filmmaking. He attended the British Film Institute to complete a number of courses on the history of the film industry, film direction and aesthetics.

He also got involved with the

Communist Party of England and became a reporter of the Communist Party newspaper, the Daily Worker. In the early 60s, Alamgir went for guerrilla warfare training in Cuba.[1] As a reporter of the communist daily, he took interview of Cuban President Fidel Castro.[3] He also took part in the wars of liberation of Palestine and Algeria.[1]
Alamgir was the founder of organisations such as East Pakistan House and East Bengal Liberation Front at London and was active in the campaign against racial discrimination.

In 1966, Alamgir came back to

documentaries
.

After the war of independence, he started making feature films. During 1981-82 Alamgir was the coordinator of the Film Appreciation Courses organized by the Film Institute, Government of Bangladesh.

Alamgir drowned on 20 January 1989 in the Jamuna River at Nagarbari ferrighat when returning from Bogra after attending a film seminar.[1]

Filmography

Feature films

Short films

  • Liberation Fighter
  • Pogrom in Bangladesh
  • Culture in Bangladesh
  • Sufia, Amulya Dhan (The Invaluable)
  • Bhor Halo Dor Kholo (Open the Door now at the Dawn)
  • Amra Dujan (The Two of Us)
  • Ek Sagar Rakter Binimoye (At the Cost of a Sea of Blood)
  • Manikanchan (The Diamond)
  • Chorasrot (The Unseen Trend)

Awards

  • National Film Award for best Dialogue - 1977[5]
  • Cine Journalists Award
  • Zahir Raihan Film Award of Uttaran
  • Syed Mohammad Parvez Award
  • Independence Day Award
    (2010)

Personal life

Kabir married Manjura Begum in 1968. After separating from her, he married actress

Jayasree Kabir in 1975. He had two daughters, Elora and Ajanta,[1] and a son Lenin Saurav Kabir.[citation needed
]

Publications

  • Cinema in Pakistan (1969)
  • Started his publication house "Vintage Publication" (1978)
  • Film in Bangladesh (1979)
  • Mohona: Chittranatya and This was Redio Bangladesh 1971 (1984)

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f Ananta Yusuf (2014-02-04). "Between Politics, Cinema and Art". The Daily Star.
  2. ^ "List of Independence Awardees". Cabinet Division, Government of Bangladesh. Retrieved 2020-01-13.
  3. ^ . Retrieved 27 March 2024.
  4. ^ "Top 10 Bangladeshi Films". British Film Institute. 2007-07-17. Archived from the original on 2009-05-27. Retrieved 2015-10-17.
  5. ^ জাতীয় চলচ্চিত্র পুরস্কার প্রাপ্তদের নামের তালিকা (১৯৭৫-২০১২) [List of the winners of National Film Awards (1975-2012)]. Government of Bangladesh (in Bengali). Bangladesh Film Development Corporation. Retrieved 2019-03-25.

External links