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National Film Award for Best Telugu Feature Film; National award for contributions to Indian Cinema: Awarded for: Best Telugu Feature Film(s) of the year: Sponsored by: National Film Development Corporation of India: Formerly called: President's Silver Medal for Best Feature Film in Telugu (1954–1968)
The National Film Award for Best Special Effects was one of the National Film Awards presented annually by the Directorate of Film Festivals, the organisation set up by Ministry of Information and Broadcasting, India. It was one of several awards presented for feature films and awarded with Rajat Kamal (Silver Lotus).
His collaborations with director Kodi Ramakrishna, especially on Ammoru, Anji, and Arundhati, are celebrated for advancing visual effects in Telugu cinema. In later years, Shyam Prasad Reddy has shifted focus to television, producing popular shows like Jabardasth, Star Mahila, Dhee, Cash, and Genes.
The following year, "Best Special Effects" became a recognized category, although on occasion the Academy has chosen to honor a single film outright rather than nominate two or more films. From 1939 to 1963, it was an award for a film's visual effects as well as audio effects, so it was often given to two persons, although some years only one ...
In 1957, the epic mythological film Mayabazar became the first Telugu film to gross over ₹ 1 crore. The 1992 film Gharana Mogudu, directed by K. Raghavendra Rao and starring Chiranjeevi was the first Telugu film to collect a share of ₹ 10 crore at the box office. In 2015, Baahubali: The Beginning became the first Telugu film to gross ₹ 500
Featured at the Fantastic Fest, [9] it won the National Award for Best Choreography and Best Special Effects at the 57th National Film Awards as well as winning six Filmfare Awards, and nine states Nandi Awards. Magadheera is the first Telugu film to have a home media release in the Blu-ray format in the Indian market.
A list of films produced in the Tollywood Telugu language film industry split by year of release in the 2010s. List of Telugu films of 2010; List of Telugu films of 2011; List of Telugu films of 2012; List of Telugu films of 2013; List of Telugu films of 2014; List of Telugu films of 2015; List of Telugu films of 2016; List of Telugu films of 2017
The theme that year was a hundred years in the future. The reason for the theme to be held that year was because it was meant to be continuous from the previous year's theme, where the fraternity celebrated the completion of a hundred years in Indian cinema at the box office. [14]