After a trip to Hollywood in 1940, film producer
Ambalal Patel pitched the idea of a weekly Indian newsreel to the British Government in India.
Indian Movietone News was subsequently established in September 1942 by Patel and Sir Edward Villiers. In an attempt to make the newsreels more accessible to the local population, Villiers intended to focus the content primarily on civil matters, a departure from other newsreels of the day which were heavily Eurocentric. Some of the other newsreels circulated in India at the time were
British Movietone News,
British Paramount News,
United News and
Gaumont British News, which all carried a distinct British or American bias, and although sometimes dubbed into local languages, were unpopular with the Indian population. Whilst subsidised by the government,
Indian Movietone News was originally intended to be independently produced and distributed. Early newsreels were produced by
Twentieth Century Fox India, and were largely reissued versions of
British Movietone newsreels dubbed into Indian languages. These were criticised by the Ministry of Information and Film India for their failure to address the country's social issue and the developing war in Europe, and were not widely circulated. In April 1943, the Indian government issued a directive under the
Defence of India Act which required Indian cinemas to show
Indian Movietone News (or other newsreels directly approved by the government) in an attempt to force it on an unwilling audience, a move which was heavily disapproved of. In order to better fulfil this directive, in 1943
Indian Movietone News was scrapped and replaced with the government-controlled
Indian News Parade, now produced and distributed by
Information Films of India. The new newsreel ran throughout the
Second World War, but in post-war India, its popularity waned amid accusations of political bias and irrelevance to modern life. In March 1946, the IFI's production budget was cut, and by the end of the month it was closed down. Indian News Parade was taken over by Ambalal Patel's Central Cine Corporation, but never escaped its reputation as a government propaganda tool, and production finally stopped in September 1946. ==Content==