SNS Sastry

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

SNS Sastry
Born1930[1]
Died1978
Alma materGovernment Film and Television Institute (GFTI), Bengaluru[2][3]
Occupationscinematographer, documentary filmmaker
Years active1950 to 1978

SNS Sastry was an Indian cinematographer and documentary filmmaker who was active from the 1950s to 1978. He is a winner of four national awards for Malwa (1963),[4]One Day (1964),[5]I Am 20 (1967),[6][7] and And I Make Short Films (1968).[8]

Sastry earned a diploma in cinematography from the Bengaluru Polytechnic, now the Government Film and Television Institute (GFTI), Bengaluru.[9][10]

He joined Films Division India, the state-run film production and distribution unit, as a newsreel cameraman in the early 1950s. Over time, he became a director. For nearly three decades until 1978, Sastry made several documentaries for Films Division. The most notable among these are One Day (1964), I Am Twenty (1967), And I Make Short Films (1968), This Bit of That India (1972),[11] The Burning Sun (1973), Our Indira (1973),[12] and Flashback (1974).[13][14][15][16]

Despite being state-sponsored, Sastry’s films are marked by a subtle criticism of the political, economic and social developments of the time. His works often feature gentle self-criticism, questioning mindsets, and resilient attitudes.[17][18]

Filmography

References

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI