<div class="section1"><div class="Normal">LONDON: Satyajit Ray''s universally acclaimed film <span style="" font-style:="" italic="">Pather Panchali</span> made in 1955 was adjudged the top Indian film while <span style="" font-style:="" italic="">Masala</span> directed by NRI Srinivas Krishna, has topped the British Film Institute''s Web poll for South Asian Cinema.<br />Ramesh Sippy''s <span style="" font-style:="" italic="">Sholay</span> comes second after <span style="" font-style:="" italic="">Pather Panchali</span> while Oscar-nominated <span style="" font-style:="" italic="">Lagaan</span> comes fourth after <span style="" font-style:="" italic="">Dilwale Dulaniya Le Jayenge</span> (<span style="" font-style:="" italic="">DDLJ</span>), an all time box office hit produced by Aditya Chopra.<br />The poll, hosted on the BFI''s own website, was open to everyone and votes were registered from across the globe, the institute said in a release on Thursday.<br /><span style="" font-style:="" italic="">Masala</span> focuses on an Indian community in Canada and explores the experiences of an extended family, from an aunt who converses with Lord Krishna through her television, to an uncle who offers refuge to suspected terrorists in his sari shop.<br />Commenting on <span style="" font-style:="" italic="">Masala</span>, director of Imagine Asia, Cary Sawhney said: "It is great that <span style="" font-style:="" italic="">Masala</span>, one of the seminal Asian films from a Western perspective, has topped the poll for Diaspora films.
In 1991 this film was ground breaking in combining everyday realities of urban youth in Canada with Bollywood-inspired escapist dream sequences."<br />Following on from the critics'' poll of South Asian film announced in October, the public was invited to vote for its own favourite South Asian film titles: Both polls were divided into five sections, producing top tens for Indian, Pakistani, Sri Lankan and Bangladeshi cinema, with a separate category for films with contemporary Asian themes or made by Western Asians. <br />In the Web poll, <span style="" font-style:="" italic="">Masala</span> topped this last category and secured the most votes overall. <br />The polls aim to generate discussion and provide a starting point for further research on these film histories and cultures and were initiated as part of the BFI''s eight-month Imagine Asia Festival which drew to a close last week.<br />The top ten Indian films were: 1. <span style="" font-style:="" italic="">Pather Panchali</span> (1955, Satyajit Ray), 2. <span style="" font-style:="" italic="">Sholay</span> (1975, Ramesh Sipply), 3. <span style="" font-style:="" italic="">Dilwale Dulaniya Le Jayenge</span> (1995, Aditya Chopra), 4. <span style="" font-style:="" italic="">Lagaan</span> (2001, Ashutosh Gowarikar), 5. <span style="" font-style:="" italic="">Mother India</span> (1957, Mehboob Khan), 6. <span style="" font-style:="" italic="">Pakeezah</span> (1971, Kamal Amrohi), 7. <span style="" font-style:="" italic="">Charulata</span> (1964, Satyajit Ray), 8. <span style="" font-style:="" italic="">Pyaasa</span> (1957, Guru Dutt), 9. <span style="" font-style:="" italic="">Dil Se</span> (1998, Mani Rathnam), 10. <span style="" font-style:="" italic="">Mughal-E-Azam</span> (1960, K Asif).<br />The top ten Diaspora films are: 1. <span style="" font-style:="" italic="">Masala</span> (1991, Srinivas Krishna), 2. <span style="" font-style:="" italic="">Monsoon Wedding</span> (2001, Mira Nair), 3. <span style="" font-style:="" italic="">The Warrior</span> (2001, Asif Kapadia), 4. <span style="" font-style:="" italic="">My Beautiful Launderette</span> (1985, Stephen Frears), 5. <span style="" font-style:="" italic="">East is East</span> (1999, Damien O''Donnell), 6. <span style="" font-style:="" italic="">Bhaji on the Beach</span> (1993, Gurinder Chadha), 7. <span style="" font-style:="" italic="">Hyderabad Blues</span> (1998, Nagesh Kuknoor), 8. <span style="" font-style:="" italic="">Fire</span> (1996, Deepa Mehta), 9. <span style="" font-style:="" italic="">Earth</span> (1998, Deepa Mehta), 10. <span style="" font-style:="" italic="">Bend it like Beckham</span> (2002, Gurinder Chadha). </div> </div>