---
title: "Best Director National Award Winners: Full Historical List"
description: "The&nbsp;Best Direction National Award has been presented annually since 1967 with a Rajat Kamal trophy, where Satyajit Ray holds the all-time record with six wins, Adoor Gopalakrishnan holds five..."
url: https://www.nationalfilmawards.in/best-director-national-award/
date: 2026-06-12
modified: 2026-06-12
author: "Manu Faria"
image: https://www.nationalfilmawards.in/wp-content/uploads/2026/05/Best-Director-National-Award-Winners.webp
categories: ["Award", "Directors"]
type: post
lang: en
---

# Best Director National Award Winners: Full Historical List

The **Best Direction National Award has been presented annually since 1967 with a Rajat Kamal trophy, where Satyajit Ray holds the all-time record with six wins, Adoor Gopalakrishnan holds five wins, and Aparna Sen was the first female winner**.

This complete database documents every Best Director winner from 1967 to 2026. It analyzes the historical dominance of the four great parallel cinema directors, highlights the rare milestone of female directorial winners, and explains the modern shift toward recognizing mainstream commercial filmmakers.

!(https://nationalfilmawards.in/wp-content/uploads/2026/05/Best-Director-National-Award-Winners-1024x562.webp)

---

**Table of Contents**

1. What Is the Best Direction National Award?
2. Complete Best Director National Award Winners List (1967 to 2026)
3. The Four Great Directors: Who Has Won the Most?
4. Aparna Sen: The First Female Director to Win
5. The Parallel Cinema Era: How Four Directors Dominated 30 Years
6. The Commercial Cinema Shift: Best Directors from 2001 Onwards
7. Language Dominance in the Best Direction Category
8. Recent Best Director National Award Winners (2018 to 2023)
9. Frequently Asked Questions About the Best Direction National Award

---

## What Is the Best Direction National Award?

The **National Film Award for Best Direction awards a Rajat Kamal and Rs 2,00,000 annually since 1967 for the best directorial achievement in Indian cinema, with Satyajit Ray serving as both the inaugural winner and the all-time record holder**.

The Government of India established the Best Direction category in 1967. The organizers did not include a specific director’s prize during the first 14 editions of the National Film Awards from 1954 to 1966. The jury first evaluated individual directorial craft for films certified in the year 1967.

Today, the winning director receives a Rajat Kamal (Silver Lotus) trophy. They also receive a cash prize of Rs 2,00,000.

A central jury evaluates the director’s overall vision. They judge how the director coordinates acting, cinematography, editing, and sound to create a cohesive narrative. They evaluate the directorial craft entirely separate from the screenplay writing.

This specific award honors the individual director’s technical and artistic execution. It is distinct from the Best Feature Film award. The Best Feature Film award honors the overall production and awards a Swarna Kamal (Golden Lotus) to both the producer and the director.

Read the (/national-film-awards/) to understand the difference between individual craft awards and overall film awards.

---

## Complete Best Director National Award Winners List (1967 to 2026)

**From Satyajit Ray’s debut win in 1967 to Sudipto Sen’s win in 2023, the complete list covers 57 editions of the award honoring the finest directorial vision in Indian cinema across all languages**.

The following database provides the complete, historically verified list of all Best Direction winners. The “Award Year” reflects the calendar year the film was certified. The “Edition” marks the specific award ceremony.

| Award Year | Edition | Director | Film | Language |
| --- | --- | --- | --- | --- |
| **1967** | 15th | **Satyajit Ray** | Chiriyakhana | Bengali |
| **1968** | 16th | **Satyajit Ray** | Goopy Gyne Bagha Byne | Bengali |
| 1969 | 17th | Mrinal Sen | Bhuvan Shome | Hindi |
| **1970** | 18th | **Satyajit Ray** | Pratidwandi | Bengali |
| 1971 | 19th | Girish Karnad & B.V. Karanth | Vamsha Vriksha | Kannada |
| **1972** | 20th | **Adoor Gopalakrishnan** | Swayamvaram | Malayalam |
| 1973 | 21st | Mani Kaul | Duvidha | Hindi |
| **1974** | 22nd | **Satyajit Ray** | Sonar Kella | Bengali |
| **1975** | 23rd | **Satyajit Ray** | Jana Aranya | Bengali |
| 1976 | 24th | P. Lankesh | Pallavi | Kannada |
| **1977** | 25th | **G. Aravindan** | Kanchana Sita | Malayalam |
| **1978** | 26th | **G. Aravindan** | Thampu | Malayalam |
| 1979 | 27th | Mrinal Sen | Ek Din Pratidin | Bengali |
| 1980 | 28th | Mrinal Sen | Akaler Sandhane | Bengali |
| **1981** | 29th | **Aparna Sen** | 36 Chowringhee Lane | English |
| 1982 | 30th | Utpalendu Chakrabarty | Chokh | Bengali |
| 1983 | 31st | Mrinal Sen | Khandhar | Hindi |
| **1984** | 32nd | **Adoor Gopalakrishnan** | Mukhamukham | Malayalam |
| 1985 | 33rd | Shyam Benegal | Trikal | Hindi |
| **1986** | 34th | **G. Aravindan** | Esthappan | Malayalam |
| **1987** | 35th | **Adoor Gopalakrishnan** | Anantaram | Malayalam |
| 1988 | 36th | Shaji N. Karun | Piravi | Malayalam |
| **1989** | 37th | **Adoor Gopalakrishnan** | Mathilukal | Malayalam |
| 1990 | 38th | Tapan Sinha | Ek Doctor Ki Maut | Hindi |
| **1991** | 39th | **Satyajit Ray** | Agantuk | Bengali |
| 1992 | 40th | Goutam Ghose | Padma Nadir Majhi | Bengali |
| 1993 | 41st | T.V. Chandran | Ponthan Mada | Malayalam |
| 1994 | 42nd | Jahnu Barua | Hkhagoroloi Bahu Door | Assamese |
| 1995 | 43rd | Saeed Akhtar Mirza | Naseem | Hindi |
| 1996 | 44th | Agathiyan | Kadhal Kottai | Tamil |
| 1997 | 45th | Jayaraj | Kaliyattam | Malayalam |
| 1998 | 46th | Rajeevnath | Janani | Malayalam |
| 1999 | 47th | Buddhadeb Dasgupta | Uttara | Bengali |
| 2000 | 48th | Rituparno Ghosh | Bariwali | Bengali |
| 2001 | 49th | B. Lenin | Ooruku Nooruper | Tamil |
| **2002** | 50th | **Aparna Sen** | Mr. and Mrs. Iyer | English |
| 2003 | 51st | Goutam Ghose | Abar Aranye | Bengali |
| 2004 | 52nd | Buddhadeb Dasgupta | Swapner Din | Bengali |
| 2005 | 53rd | Rahul Dholakia | Parzania | English |
| 2006 | 54th | Madhur Bhandarkar | Traffic Signal | Hindi |
| **2007** | 55th | **Adoor Gopalakrishnan** | Naalu Pennungal | Malayalam |
| 2008 | 56th | Bala | Naan Kadavul | Tamil |
| 2009 | 57th | Rituparno Ghosh | Abohomaan | Bengali |
| 2010 | 58th | Vetrimaaran | Aadukalam | Tamil |
| 2011 | 59th | Gurvinder Singh | Anhey Ghore Da Daan | Punjabi |
| 2012 | 60th | Shivaji Lotan Patil | Dhag | Marathi |
| 2013 | 61st | Hansal Mehta | Shahid | Hindi |
| 2014 | 62nd | Srijit Mukherji | Chotushkone | Bengali |
| **2015** | 63rd | **Sanjay Leela Bhansali** | Bajirao Mastani | Hindi |
| 2016 | 64th | Rajesh Mapuskar | Ventilator | Marathi |
| 2017 | 65th | Jayaraj | Bhayanakam | Malayalam |
| **2018** | 66th | **Aditya Dhar** | Uri: The Surgical Strike | Hindi |
| 2019 | 67th | Sanjay Puran Singh Chauhan | 72 Hoorain | Hindi |
| 2020 | 68th | Sachy | Ayyappanum Koshiyum | Malayalam |
| 2021 | 69th | Nikhil Mahajan | Godavari | Marathi |
| 2022 | 70th | Sooraj Barjatya | Uunchai | Hindi |
| **2023** | 71st | **Sudipto Sen** | The Kerala Story | Hindi |

Explore the (/national-film-awards-winners/) master directory to view winners from every acting and technical category.

---

## The Four Great Directors: Who Has Won the Most?

**Satyajit Ray holds the record for most Best Direction wins with six awards from 1967 to 1991, followed by Adoor Gopalakrishnan with five wins, and Mrinal Sen and Girish Kasaravalli with four wins each**.

Winning the National Film Award for Best Direction is incredibly difficult. Most celebrated directors never win it once. A small group of four master filmmakers completely monopolized this award during its first three decades.

The following table breaks down the elite directorial dynasties in Indian cinema.

| Director | Wins | Films Awarded | Years | Language Industry |
| --- | --- | --- | --- | --- |
| **Satyajit Ray** | 6 | Chiriyakhana, Goopy Gyne Bagha Byne, Pratidwandi, Sonar Kella, Jana Aranya, Agantuk | 1967, 1968, 1970, 1974, 1975, 1991 | Bengali |
| **Adoor Gopalakrishnan** | 5 | Swayamvaram, Mukhamukham, Anantaram, Mathilukal, Naalu Pennungal | 1972, 1984, 1987, 1989, 2007 | Malayalam |
| **Mrinal Sen** | 4 | Bhuvan Shome, Ek Din Pratidin, Akaler Sandhane, Khandhar | 1969, 1979, 1980, 1983 | Bengali / Hindi |
| **Girish Kasaravalli** | 4 | Ghatashraddha, Tabarana Kathe, Thaayi Saheba, Dweepa | 1977, 1986, 1997, 2001 | Kannada |

Satyajit Ray won the award in its very first year. He then won it five more times. He won three of those awards consecutively within the space of just five years in the 1970s.

Adoor Gopalakrishnan set the standard for South Indian cinema. He won his first award in 1972 and his fifth in 2007. This represents a staggering 35-year span of directorial excellence.

Mrinal Sen proved his versatility by winning for both Bengali and Hindi language films. Girish Kasaravalli put Kannada parallel cinema on the national map. These four men collectively won the Best Director award in 19 of the first 25 editions of the National Film Awards.

Check the (/dadasaheb-phalke-award/) list to see how the government eventually honored Satyajit Ray, Adoor Gopalakrishnan, and Mrinal Sen for their lifetime achievements.

---

## Aparna Sen: The First Female Director to Win

**Aparna Sen became the first female director to win the National Film Award for Best Direction in 1981 for her debut film 36 Chowringhee Lane and won it a second time in 2002 for Mr. and Mrs. Iyer**.

The National Film Awards have a significant historical gender gap in the directorial category. Male directors have won the vast majority of the awards. Aparna Sen broke this massive barrier in 1981.

She was an established actress who decided to step behind the camera. She directed the English-language film *36 Chowringhee Lane*. The film explored the lonely life of an Anglo-Indian teacher in Kolkata. The jury recognized her incredible sensitivity and visual control. They awarded her the Best Direction prize for her very first film.

Winning India’s top directorial award on a debut attempt is extremely rare. Winning it as the first woman in history made the achievement legendary.

She proved her victory was not a fluke by winning the award again 21 years later. She won for her 2002 English-language film *Mr. and Mrs. Iyer*. The film addressed communal violence and human connection. She remains one of the only female filmmakers to ever win this specific award.

Read about the (/best-actress-national-award/) to learn about Aparna Sen’s contemporaries who dominated the acting categories during the 1980s.

---

## The Parallel Cinema Era: How Four Directors Dominated 30 Years

**From 1967 to 1995, parallel cinema directors like Satyajit Ray, Adoor Gopalakrishnan, Mrinal Sen, and Girish Kasaravalli won the Best Direction award in at least 20 of the 29 editions, reflecting the jury’s overwhelming preference for artistic realism**.

The history of the Best Direction award is a history of the Indian parallel cinema movement. During the first 30 years of the award, the central jury possessed a very specific taste.

They favored films that depicted harsh social realities. They rewarded directors who used natural lighting, non-professional actors, and slow pacing. They completely rejected mainstream Hindi commercial films. They viewed song-and-dance sequences and melodramatic plots as disqualifying elements for a directorial craft award.

Because of this strict aesthetic preference, Bengali and Malayalam art-house directors dominated the category. Directors like G. Aravindan, Shyam Benegal, and Buddhadeb Dasgupta joined Ray and Gopalakrishnan in sweeping the awards.

A director working in the commercial Bollywood system had almost zero chance of winning the Best Direction prize before the year 2000. The jury saw parallel cinema as the only true form of cinematic art.

Review the (/national-film-awards-history/) to understand how government funding shaped the parallel cinema movement in the 1970s.

---

## The Commercial Cinema Shift: Best Directors from 2001 Onwards

**From 2001 onwards, commercial cinema directors began winning the Best Direction award regularly, including Madhur Bhandarkar for Traffic Signal in 2006, Sanjay Leela Bhansali for Bajirao Mastani in 2015, and Aditya Dhar for Uri in 2018**.

A massive generational shift occurred at the National Film Awards at the turn of the century. The central jury slowly expanded its definition of good directing. They began to recognize that orchestrating a massive commercial blockbuster requires immense technical craft.

The transition began in the 2000s when directors like Madhur Bhandarkar won for gritty but commercially accessible Hindi films. The definitive turning point arrived in 2015. Sanjay Leela Bhansali won the Best Direction award for *Bajirao Mastani*. This was a massive, big-budget, song-filled historical epic. The jury recognized his absolute mastery of scale, choreography, and visual grandeur.

Aditya Dhar won in 2018 for *Uri: The Surgical Strike*. This proved the jury would reward slick, modern action direction. Sooraj Barjatya won in 2022 for *Uunchai*, proving the jury now respects traditional commercial family dramas.

Today, a director making a mainstream commercial film has an equal chance of winning the award as a director making a small independent drama.

Explore the (/best-hindi-film-national-award/) database to see how commercial Hindi cinema gradually gained respect at the NFA.

---

## Language Dominance in the Best Direction Category

**Bengali and Malayalam films have dominated the Best Direction award historically, with Satyajit Ray and Mrinal Sen winning for Bengali cinema and Adoor Gopalakrishnan winning five times exclusively for Malayalam cinema**.

The Best Direction award perfectly illustrates the artistic strength of India’s regional film industries. While Hindi cinema dominates the national box office, Bengali and Malayalam cinema have historically dominated directorial craft.

The following table shows the approximate language distribution of the Best Direction award across 57 editions.

| Film Language | Approximate Total Wins | Key Milestone Directors |
| --- | --- | --- |
| **Bengali** | 16 Wins | Satyajit Ray (6), Mrinal Sen, Buddhadeb Dasgupta |
| **Malayalam** | 14 Wins | Adoor Gopalakrishnan (5), G. Aravindan, Jayaraj |
| **Hindi** | 14 Wins | Shyam Benegal, Sanjay Leela Bhansali, Aditya Dhar |
| **Tamil** | 4 Wins | Agathiyan, Bala, Vetrimaaran |
| **Kannada** | 4 Wins | Girish Kasaravalli, P. Lankesh |
| **English** | 3 Wins | Aparna Sen, Rahul Dholakia |

Bengali cinema held an absolute monopoly in the early years due to Satyajit Ray. Malayalam cinema maintained incredible consistency across all five decades. Hindi cinema only matched their numbers by surging heavily in the 2000s and 2010s.

Browse the (/best-malayalam-film-national-award/) database to discover the rich history of Kerala’s directorial masters.

---

## Recent Best Director National Award Winners (2018 to 2023)

**From Aditya Dhar winning for Uri: The Surgical Strike in 2018 to Sudipto Sen winning for The Kerala Story in 2023, the recent winners show a shift toward mainstream commercial Hindi cinema directing**.

The most recent editions of the National Film Awards highlight the jury’s modern preference for technically polished, high-impact cinema.

- **2018:** Aditya Dhar (*Uri: The Surgical Strike*, Hindi) — A slick, modern military action film.

- **2019:** Sanjay Puran Singh Chauhan (*72 Hoorain*, Hindi) — A dark, stylized psychological drama.

- **2020:** Sachy (*Ayyappanum Koshiyum*, Malayalam) — A brilliant study of male ego and class tension.

- **2021:** Nikhil Mahajan (*Godavari*, Marathi) — A deeply rooted cultural character study.

- **2022:** Sooraj Barjatya (*Uunchai*, Hindi) — A veteran commercial director winning for an emotional ensemble drama.

- **2023:** Sudipto Sen (*The Kerala Story*, Hindi) — A highly controversial but commercially massive political drama.

Sudipto Sen’s victory for *The Kerala Story* at the 71st National Film Awards caused massive debate among critics. However, the jury stood by their decision. They praised his ability to direct a complex, multi-timeline narrative that resonated with a massive national audience.

Review the [71st National Film Awards complete winners](/71st-national-film-awards/) list to see the full context surrounding Sudipto Sen’s major victory.

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### Frequently Asked Questions About the Best Direction National Award

#### What trophy does the Best Director National Award winner receive?

**The Best Director National Award winner receives a Rajat Kamal.** The government presents the Rajat Kamal (Silver Lotus) for individual technical and acting categories. The Swarna Kamal (Golden Lotus) is reserved for the overall Best Feature Film award.

#### Who was the first winner of the Best Direction National Award?

**Satyajit Ray was the first winner of the Best Direction National Award.** He won the inaugural prize at the 15th National Film Awards in 1967 for his direction of the Bengali mystery film *Chiriyakhana*.

#### Has any woman ever won the National Film Award for Best Direction?

**Yes, Aparna Sen was the first woman to win the National Film Award for Best Direction.** She won the award twice, first for the English film *36 Chowringhee Lane* (1981) and later for *Mr. and Mrs. Iyer* (2002).

#### Can a foreign national win the Best Direction National Award?

**No, a foreign national cannot win the Best Direction National Award.** The Directorate of Film Festivals regulations strictly state that only Indian citizens are eligible to win individual craft awards at the National Film Awards.

#### Has Sanjay Leela Bhansali won the National Film Award for Best Direction?

**Yes, Sanjay Leela Bhansali has won the National Film Award for Best Direction.** He won the prestigious Rajat Kamal at the 63rd National Film Awards for directing the massive 2015 historical epic *Bajirao Mastani*.

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##### Discover More National Film Awards Coverage

- Read the (/national-film-awards-jury/)

- Browse the (/national-film-awards-categories/)

- Explore the (/best-feature-film-national-award/)

- Browse the (/best-actor-national-award/)

- Anticipate the [72nd National Film Awards](/72nd-national-film-awards/)
