Kohinoor Film Company

Kohinoor Film Company
Company type
IndustryEntertainment
Genre
Founded1918–1919
FounderDwarkadas Sampat
Defunct1932
Headquarters,
India
ProductsMostly silent films

Kohinoor Film Company was an Indian film studio established in 1919 by Dwarkadas Sampat (1884-1958). According to Ashish Rajadhyaksha and Paul Willemen, it was the largest and most influential studio of the Indian silent film era. The studio gained national prominence when its 1921 film Bhakta Vidur, was banned by the British colonial government on the ground that the character Vidur, played by its producer Sampat, was "portrayed as a 'thinly-clad version' of Mahatma Gandhi."

Under Kohinoor, directors such as Kanjibhai Rathod and Homi Master made some of the most popular films of the era. For example, under Rathod's direction, the 1924 film Gul-e-Bakavali is widely regarded as the 'first all-India super hit'. Several stars of the time such as Zubeida, Khalil, and Raja Sandow started their careers at the studio. Film scholar Suresh Chabria, a former director of the National Film Archive of India, argues that Kohinoor Film Company was "perhaps the first Indian studio to decisively move away from the artisanal production practices of D. G. Phalke, S. N. Patankar, and others."