National Film Award for Best Editing | |
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National award for contributions to non-feature films | |
Sponsored by | National Film Development Corporation of India |
Reward(s) |
|
First awarded | 1990 |
Last awarded | 2022 |
Most recent winner | Suresh Urs |
Highlights | |
Total awarded | 31 |
First winner | Rajasekharan |
The National Film Award for Best Editing is one of the National Film Awards presented annually by the National Film Development Corporation of India. It is one of several awards presented for non-feature films and awarded with Rajat Kamal (Silver Lotus).
The award was instituted in 1990 at the 38th National Film Awards and awarded annually for short films produced in the year across the country, in all Indian languages.
Award includes 'Rajat Kamal' (Silver Lotus) and cash prize. Following are the award winners over the years:
List of award recipients, showing the year (award ceremony), film(s), language(s) and citation | |||||
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Year | Recipient(s) | Film(s) | Language(s) | Citation | Refs. |
1990 (38th) | Rajasekharan | Mohiniyattam | English | For making use of the full potential of the dimensions of space and time with creative excellence. | [1] |
1991 (39th) | Rajesh Parmar | Sanchari | English | For his work, which beautifully creates a structure that responds to the rhythms of the dance. | [2] |
1992 (40th) | K. R. Bose | Kalarippayat | English | For deft cutting of difficult sequence which makes it possible to maintain the rhythm and tempo of the film. | [3] |
1993 (41st) | Rajesh Parmar | Colors of Absence | English | For smooth, precise and excellently edited work, which gives the film its unique rhythm, in keeping with its form and content. | [4] |
1994 (42nd) | Paresh Kamdar | Rasayatra | • Hindi •English | For the elegant pace with which he discovers spatial correlatives for the inherent musicality. | [5] |
1995 (43rd) | B. Lenin | Kutravali | Tamil | For rhythmic pace in relation to the appropriate mood of both the films. | [6] |
V. T. Vijayan | Oodaha | ||||
1996 (44th) | A. Sreekar Prasad | Nauka Charitramu | English | For knitting together harmoniously into an unbroken visual flow in the film. | [7] |
1997 (45th) | Ujjal Nandy | Jataner Jami | Bengali | For the seamless and rhythmic flow of visual images, juxtaposing hope and despair in a harmonious aesthetic. | [8] |
1998 (46th) | Reena Mohan | In The Forest Hangs a Bridge | English | For weaving a narrative imbued with lyricism of life. | [9] |
1999 (47th) | Ajit Kumar | Of Confucius, S-Spots and Toy guns | •English •Hindi •Marathi •Tamil | For the creative and crisp juxtaposition of imagery which complements the theme of the film. | [10] |
2000 (48th) | Sankalp Meshram | Lokpriya | Hindi | For skilfully juxtaposing three streams of visuals into one rhythmic meaningful narrative. | [11] |
2001 (49th) | Ajith | Athman | Universal | For maintaining the pace and drama of the film without any spoken words. | [12] |
2002 (50th) | Prathapan P. | 00:00 | English | For its intelligent and engaging use of cinematic form and structure as it weaves itself in and out of hotel rooms and people's lives on New Year's Eve at a sea-side hotel. | [13] |
2003 (51st) | Beena Paul | Unni | Malayalam | For the way she supports the eerie pace of a story that swings from here to beyond. | [14] |
2004 (52nd) | Prashant Naik | Harvest of Hunger | •English • Oriya | For documenting with apathy of the drought stricken villagers, by fluent and flowing editing style, keeping the interest on the subject, very engaging. | [15] |
2005 (53rd) | Vibuti Nathjha | Naina Jogin | •Hindi • Maithili | For its skilful editing. It is difficult to make out where one sequence ends and the other begins! | [16] |
2006 (54th) | Amitabh Chakraborty | Bishar Blues | Bengali | For creating a rhythm which is unhurried and profound and that is in tune with the life and world view of Fakirs in rural Bengal. | [17] |
2006 (54th) | Amit Debnath | ||||
2007 (55th) | Saikat Ray | Hope Dies Last in War | •English •Hindi | For its creative blending of various elements of the past and present, as also for its seamless flow of images that evoke genuine emotions. | [18] |
2008 (56th) | Manoj Kannoth | Stations | •Hindi •Marathi •English | For a delicately interwoven edit of three sparsely connected contemporary urban tales of alienation. Developing a rhythm with parallel and simultaneous stories, the cutting sculpts an extremely powerful contemporary form. | [19] |
2009 (57th) | Tarun Bhartiya | In Camera | English | For being able to seamlessly juxtapose past and present experiences in the form of images. | [20] |
2010 (58th) | Tinni Mitra | Germ | Hindi | For the abstract visualisation and endearing black &white tones are very effectively punctuated with fine editing, and in the process it maintains a very subtle and flowing rhythm and pace to carry forward the cinematic work. | [21] |
2011 (59th) | Iram Ghufran | There is Something in the Air | •Hindi • Urdu •English | For infusing the film with a magical rhythm that underscores its inherent poetry. | [22] |
2012 (60th) | Irene Dhar Malik | Celluloid Man | •English •Hindi •Kannada •Bengali | For the skilful interweaving of images from the past and present, juxtaposed seamlessly into a compelling, multi layered narrative. | [23] |
2013 (61st) | Arjun Gaurisaria | Gulabi Gang | •Hindi •Bundelkhandi | For imparting the film with its structure and rhythm, tempo and drama, movement and exposition. | [24] |
2014 (62nd) | Andi Campbell Waite | Tigress Blood | English | For seamlessly structuring the inner worlds of four tigress sisters through an incisive cinematic arrangement of their outer spaces. | [25] |
2015 (63rd) | Parvin Angre | Breaking Free | English | For an orchestrated cuts and curves to depict the hardship of the oppressed. | [26] |
2015 (63rd) | Sridhar Rangayan | ||||
2016 (64th) | Jishnu Sen | Gudh | Seamlessly weaves the inner worlds of a young boy’s innocence with the harsh realities of the journey he is embarking on. | [27] | |
2017 (65th) | Sanjiv Monga | Mrityubhoj: The Death Feast | Well-paced editing of a sombre subject that keeps the audience engaged till the end. | ||
2017 (65th) | Tenzin Kunchok | ||||
2018 (66th) | Hemanti Sarkar | Son Rise | For its faultless pace and seamless structure in drawing the viewer into the depth and gravity of the film’s focus, through varied space, location and time. |
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