A 1997 government committee identified the following 13 films as the best of the first 50 years of Sri Lankan cinema:
Early development (1901–1947) 1901 marked the introduction of film to Sri Lanka (then called Ceylon) when a film was shown for the first time in the country at a private screening for the British governor West Ridgeway and prisoners of the
Second Boer War. It was a short film that documented the British victory in the Boer War, the burial of
Queen Victoria and the coronation of
Edward VII. More English screenings followed and attracted British settlers and Anglicized Sinhalese. Cinema in Sri Lanka became a public affair due to the efforts of Warwick Major, an Englishman who developed "bioscope" showings. These were films screened out in open areas and makeshift tents. The first permanent theaters were built by Madan Theaters in 1903. The company showed Indian films and achieved success, prompting the development of theaters by the rival Olympia. In 1925
Rajakeeya Wickremaya (English:
Royal Adventure) became the first film to be made in Sri Lanka. Dr.
N.M. Perera played the lead in the film which was shown in
India and
Singapore. However, this film reels got burnt before they were shown in Sri Lanka. In 1933 the film
Paliganeema was screened in Colombo. During the 1920s and 1930s films with American stars like
Charlie Chaplin,
Greta Garbo,
John Barrymore,
Rudolph Valentino, and
Douglas Fairbanks, Jr. were popular in Sri Lanka.
The Sheik and
The Thief of Bagdad were especially popular. in 1932, the first sound film to be screened was shown at the Regal Cinema, titled "The Dream." By the 1930s Indian films started to surpass English films in popularity.
Bilwa Mangal set an early record for Sri Lankan box office earnings. The beginnings of cinema's spread was seen when the Indian Madan circuit established Elphinstone cinema in Colombo as a part of his extensive cinema chain in Asia. Empire cinema, which became the longest functioning cinema in Sri Lanka was established in 1915 and continued to function till 2003 when it was demolished to make way for a commercial building in Colombo.
Inauguration (1947) South Indian producer S. M. Nayagam played an important role in the development of the first Sri Lankan film. In 1945, Nayagam founded a company named Chitrakala Movietone and constructed a studio in
Madurai, India for the purpose of making a Sinhalese film. After considering several options, he decided to build the film around the historical love story of Saliya and Asokamala and held a contest to find a suitable screenplay; the winner was budding artist Shanthi Kumar. Due to disagreements however, this project fell through and Nayagam broke a deal with dramatist
B. A. W. Jayamanne to film his popular play
Kadawunu Poronduwa. Kumar determined to film his script left Nayagam's company and convinced the Ceylon Theaters group to fund his film. Faced with a more daunting task of putting together the film from scratch, the
Ashokamala project began filming in
Coimbatore about two months after the production of
Kadawunu Poronduwa had initiated. Naygam's film would win out screening at the Mylan Theater on January 21, 1947.
Ashokamala was screened three months later in April 1947 at the Elphinstone Theater. Most of his films featured the couple
Rukmani Devi and
Eddie Jayamanne (though never as lovers on screen) which allowed them to become the first stars of Sri Lankan cinema. In his work, Wimalaweera researched Sri Lankan history when depicting historical characters like King
Asoka, who oversaw the introduction of Buddhism to the island and Saradiel, a Robin Hood-like character. breaking into the scene with the technically skilled
Sujatha made at the state of the art Modern Theaters studio in
Salem, India. It was highly successful and influenced popular cinema over the following decade. It was revolutionary in its high production values and incorporation of North Indian cinema into the accepted South Indian model. Still, it failed to capture the true nature of Sinhalese life or create anything uniquely Sri Lankan. In all facets of the creation of
Rekava, the trio strayed from tradition shooting completely outside of the studio, creating an original story with no basis in literary or historical material and utilizing a mostly inexperienced cast (with a few exceptions i.e.
D. R. Nanayakkara). The story paid great attention to Sinhalese village life, giving equal time to marriage traditions, village customs and folk beliefs in a non obstructive documentary-esque manner. The main plot revolved around a young boy named Sena who becomes touted as a miracle worker after he is said to cure the blindness of his friend Anula. Though some viewed the plot as a bit naive due to the filmmakers being from the city and the attribution of
superstition belief in an exaggerated manner to village folk, it was a critical success and was shown at the
Cannes International Film Festival drawing praise from foreign critics. It is widely considered in Sri Lanka to be the birth of true Sinhalese cinema. Audiences at the time were unresponsive however and the film was a box office failure. They were unaccustomed to the documentary-like nature of the film and its avoidance of common melodramatic features common in cinema of the time. The lack of a major romantic plot, for example, was a grievance to some.
Following in the path of Rekava (1957–1963) Popular film continued in the Indian mould. There was great interest in the cinema. The Sinhalese daily, "
Lankadipa" launched the first film festival where "Deepasika" awards were given out. Though Rekava failed to influence popular cinema which continued to imitate Indian cinema, it did draw out the efforts of some small independent filmmakers who coalesced into units. The most important group in this period, Kurulu Rana, was led by screenwriter P. K. D. Seneviratne, producer John Amaratunga and actress
Punya Heendeniya. Amaratunga in his pursuit to follow up
Rekava, came across Seneviratne's radio drama
Kurulubedde and enlisted him to adapt it into a film. Though it maintained certain formulaic elements, the film was free of overt Indian influence and contained various elements of Sinhalese culture. Actress
Punya Heendeniya broke ground in her role portraying a truly Sinhalese character in contrast with the female roles of popular films modeled after Indian actresses. It was a critical success within Sri Lanka and was praised for its realistic portrayal of Sinhalese village life. The group followed up with the thematically similar
Sikuru Tharuwa in 1963. It proved the viability of artistic cinema in the country and gave Sri Lankan cinema a before absent sense of prestige when Producer Anton Wicremasinghe was awarded the Golden Peacock Award and the Critics' Prize at the Third International Film Festival held in New Delhi and the Golden Head of Palanque at the Eighth World Review of Film Festivals held in Acapulco, Mexico.
Artistic boom (1964–1970) The success of
Gamperaliya changed the course of Sri Lankan cinema significantly. Following its release, many films attempted to adapt the realistic style of the film and took up location shooting previously shunned. Seneviratne again emerged in this period with a script about village life titled
Parasathu Mal. This time he had the support of the wealthy producer
Chithra Balasuriya who would not fall prey to financial difficulties encountered by Amaratunga. Balasuriya was deeply interested in creating an artistic film in the vein of
Gamperaliya and enlisted Lester's wife Sumithra Peries as technical director and gave the budding actor
Gamini Fonseka a chance to direct. Fonseka had served in a similar capacity on
Rekawa. Also among the crew was cameraman Sumitta Amarsinghe who had trained with the GFU and was adept at outdoor shooting. starring a comedic actor,
Joe Abeywickrema, for the first time in Sri Lankan cinema. It dealt with slum life and the criminal element within it and was awarded most of the national awards that year for film. Titus Thotawatte who had broken away from Lester James Peries after
Sandesaya directed
Chandiya the same year avoiding overt crudities prevalent in the action genre made within the country. Perera and his group had first come to fame with
Saama, a stylized but faithful observance of village life. Peries'
Nidhanaya, released in 1972, is considered his masterpiece and was adjusted the best Sri Lankan film of the first 50 years in 1997 by a government board. It was praised for its skillful direction by Peries' and the inspired acting by
Gamini and
Malini Fonseka. It was another international success for Peries' winning the Silver Lion of St. Mark award at the
Venice International Film Festival and being selected one of the outstanding films of the year, receiving a Diploma, at the
London Film Festival. His subsequent works of the period were also critical successes (
Desa Nisa and
Madol Duwa).
Dharmasena Pathiraja, who had worked on Yapa's
Hanthane Kathawa, emerged with his debut directorial effort,
Ahas Gauwa, in 1974. It served to capture the spirit of the dissolute urban youth and provided a major artistic venture for actors like Cyril Wickremage to prosper in. Obeysekera pursued a similar theme in his work
Valmathvuvo.
Beginning of decline (1979–1983) With the 1977 elections a more capitalist party came to power and some of the restrictions instilled earlier were removed. But this removal only in respect of production, which resulted in a flood of shoddily made films under the unrestricted credit given by Anton Wicremasinghe to anyone. Some 100 films were waiting for release as cinemas, in a curious contradiction, was forced to show each and every film so made. As a result, the peak film attendance of 74.4 admissions of 1979, began to drop and has been declining uncontrollably till now. It is popularly held that television was the cause of this decline. But Sri Lanka television broadcaster Rupavahini Corporation commenced transmission only in 1982, by which time island-wide cinema attendance had dropped to 51 million, from the peak of 74.4 million of 1979. The Presidential Committee to Investigate the Film Industry in 1985 established that there was a major drop in attendance for Tamil films in 1980. Since television went islandwide only in 1983, this drop in film admission was due not to television but to new Tamil films not being screened.
Sumitra Peries, Lester James Peries' wife, made her directorial debut with
Gehenu Lamai in 1978. It examined the effects of societal constraints on a rural girl and secured some critical applause in addition to box office success being selected as an outstanding film of the year to be presented at the
London Film Festival and receiving the Jury Award at the Carthage International Film Festival. In her first film appearance, Vasantha Chathurani was praised for her restrained portrayal of the lead role. Peries' next film
Ganga Addara (1980) captured the imagination of Sri Lankan audiences becoming a huge box office hit and breaking earning records in the country. Critics were also impressed with the film as it went on to capture many of the national awards given to film in the country and was awarded a diploma at the South Asian Film Festival. Pathiraja was most active in this period directing
Eya Dan Loku Lamayek (1977),
Bambaru Awith (1978),
Ponmani and
Soldadu Unnahe (1981).
Bambaru Awith is widely held to be his pivotal work dealing with social tensions between fishing folk and city youth. Pathiraja's film
Ponmani was made in Tamil intending to contribute to the development of cinema featuring that language in the country. Though well made, the film was ignored by Tamil audiences distrustful of the Sinhalese director.
Soldadu Unnahe followed the dreary lives of an old soldier, a prostitute, an alcoholic and a thief intending to cast light on their plight. Pathiraja went into hiatus following the making of the film. Obeysekera made his most highly regarded film
Palengetiyo in 1979. It dealt with the difficulties of urban youth. His next film
Dadayama (1983) was also well received. The star of
Palengetiyo,
Dharmasiri Bandaranayake broke out as a director with his highly stylized debut
Hansa Vilak in 1980.
Decline (1983–1990) With the flooding of films directed by "anyone" under the National Film Corporation Chairman Anton Wicremesighe during which hundreds of films were produced creating a 5-year line of films waiting for release, being no match for the increasing rise of television coupled with the beginning of a civil war, film earnings began to drop as Sri Lankans took to staying at home instead of frequenting the theater. The significant films of the era include Sumitra Peries'
Sagara Jalaya Madi Heduwa Oba Sanda, Tissa Abeysekara's
Viragaya (1988) and
D. B. Nihalsinghe's
Ridi Nimnaya (1983), and Producer
Vijaya Ramanayake's
Maldeniye Simiyon (1986). Maldeniye Simion" won the Silver Peacock for Anoja Weerasinghe at the 11th New Delhi International Film Festival in 1987. Nihalsinghe infused his films with his skillful combination of technical excellence with artistry.
Keli Madala (1991) was a creative success winning no less than 14 national film awards- perhaps the highest number ever won by one film to date.
Rise of independent filmmakers (1990–2010s) One of the most important filmmakers of Sri Lankan cinema,
Prasanna Vithanage directed his first feature film
Sisila Gini Ganee in 1992 and his second
Anantha Rathriya in 1995. The latter was a large critical hit being shown at several international festival and securing several awards. Vithanage's followed the work two years later with
Pawuru Walalu a mature drama that featured a performance by former star
Nita Fernando after a long hiatus. It was also lauded by critics. His final feature of the decade was
Purahanda Kaluwara that examined how the
Sri Lankan civil war affects families of soldiers. Featuring a contemplative performance by Joe Abeywickrema in the main role, the film is considered Vithanage's finest work.
Chandran Rutnam is another award-winning film maker directed and edited the film
The Road from Elephant Pass, which was a Finalist Award Winner at the New York International Television and Film Awards in 2011 and
A Common Man with Academy Award Winner
Sir Ben Kingsley and
Ben Cross. The film was nominated for the four main awards at the Madrid International Film Festival in 2013. The film won the Best Picture, Best Director and the Best Actor Awards in that year.
Modern era (2000-present) Director
Vimukthi Jayasundara became the first Sri Lankan to ever win the prestigious
Caméra d'Or award for Best First Film at the
2005 Cannes Film Festival for his film
Sulanga Enu Pinisa. Controversial filmmaker
Asoka Handagama's films are considered by many prestigious names in the Sri Lankan film world to be the best films of honest response to the
civil war. •
Sanda Dadayama •
Chanda Kinnarie •
Me mage sandai •
Tani tatuwen piyabanna •
Aksharaya •
Vidu •
Ini Awan Those films won awards at many international film festivals. He has faced many
censorship problems with his creation; his film
Aksharaya was banned by the
Sri Lankan government. Recent releases include:
Sooriya Arana,
Aadaraneeya Wassaanaya,
Samanala thatu,
Aloko Udapadi,
Hiripoda wessa, have attracted Sri Lankans to cinemas.
Sooriya Arana was replaced by Jackson Anthony's
Aba (film) as the highest-grossing film in Sri Lankan cinema history, generating
Rs.185 million at the
box office.
Aba, also became the most expensive film produced in Sri Lanka costing over 60 million Rupees to produce as well as being the first Sri Lankan film to be finished via
digital intermediate technology. Several other countries such as
China,
Italy and
Australia have shown interest in screening this film after its
trailer was released. Among them China has shown special interest by considering dubbing it in Chinese. Aba was released on 8 August 2008. In 2009
Prasanna Vithanage's Akasa Kusum (Flowers in the Sky) ran at 22 screens to packed audiences for over 70 days. The film which premiered at the Pusan International Film Festival in late 2008 also won several awards and was invited to numerous international film festivals. While Sri Lankan films were winning international awards, and while
Aba (film) attracted an unprecedented Rs.185 million in income and over 1 million admissions sold, in yearly admissions continued to fall without let. By 2009 it had dwindled to a mere trickle of 7.2 million attendances a year. The number of cinemas which was 365 in 1979 had fallen to a mere 147. By end of 2010, the yearly cinema attendance had fallen to 5.5 million, the lowest in the history of Sri Lankan cinema. A hapless National Film Corporation was seen to be lost, frozen in inaction while the 4 private sector distributors who had taken over the reins to run the film industry since 2001, were waiting for the audience to fall into their laps. Since privatization of film distribution in 2001 among 4 "distributors" without calling for any bids, as is customary when a government gives up a monopoly, by the Chandrika Bandaranayake government, 111 cinemas have closed by July 2010- an average of one per month, signifying a failure of that process. The number of domestically produced films screened for 2009 was 15 according to statistics released by the National Film Corporation. In the recent years several high budget historical films like
Aloko Udapadi,
Aba,
Pathini,
Maharaja Gemunu and
Vijayaba Kollaya produced and gain huge success. Most of them are based on
Sri Lankan epic historical stories gain huge success. In 2017
Dharmayuddhaya earned 22.4 SL crores (224 million) and became the highest-grossing film in Sri Lanka replacing
Aba.In 2023, Gajaman earned 610 million (LKR) becoming the highest-grossing film in Sri Lanka breaking Aba's record. Sinhala cinema has improved tremendously in 2025. In the first half of this year alone, almost six films grossed over Rs. 200 million each, with occupancy rates of 75-78% — far better than many Hollywood blockbusters.
Short-film culture In the context of Sri-Lankan cinema, this remembrance of the short film could easily be related to its history. Here, the short film has retained its status only as an exercise for the film-makers who rose to fame with the feature film. Dr.
Lester James Peries, the realist film-maker, began his career, first, creating a short film titled “Soliloquy”. Another towering figure in country’s cinema, Dr.
Dharmasena Pathiraja, also created a short film titled “Enemies” as his first cinematic experience. The State Film Corporation, which was established in the 1971, instituted a requirement for aspiring cinema-artists to make a short film prior to debut as a feature film-maker, and making them entitled to receive publicly funded production credit. However, the problem was not that one made a short film before his long-length film, but the abandonment of the short-film as cinematic-medium thereafter by Anton Wicremesinghe after 1979 by making public funds available to "anyone" with disastrous results. Young filmmaker
Malaka Dewapriya was screened his ‘‘Life Circle’’ Short Film in the international competition in 2004, at the 10th
International Student Film Festival in Tel Aviv, Israel. This was the first time a Sri Lankan student's film was chosen in an internationally recognized festival. And the selection was a big step to re-establish short film culture in Sri Lanka. The addition of annual short film festivals to the local cinematic calendar, like the Agenda 14 Short Film Festival conducted by Anoma Rajakaruna, continue to motivate and enable talented young filmmakers to engage in the tradition of short-film making. A number of these programs have acquired support from international sources, like the European Film Academy in the case of Agenda 14, and that a number of short films by emerging filmmakers like Rehan Muddanayake, Hiran Balasuriya and Prabuddha Dihkwaththa have had their short-films receive some international recognition as well. Director Ilango Ramanathan - widely known as Ilango Ram's debut short film 'Mouna Vizhiththuligal'
(Silent Tears) in the year 2014 traveled to 27 international film festivals and secured 19 awards including best foreign language film, best director, best screenplay, best cinematography, best child artist to name a few. Silent Tears was also screened in
Locarno Open Doors in the year 2017. More recently, the High School Junkies led by filmmaker Akash Sk have gained international recognition for their short film
EIDETIC which became the first Sri Lankan film to be screened at
San Diego Comic-Con's International Film Festival. The film has played at various other festivals worldwide including
Raindance Film Festival. Their consequent horror short film
The Summoning became the second film to be screened at the same festival in 2019. There is a new resurgence in independent filmmaking with short films such as these being released on platforms such as
YouTube. == Leading actors ==