---
title: "Best Feature Film National Award Winners: All Years Database"
description: "The&nbsp;National Film Award for Best Feature Film is India's most prestigious cinema prize awarded annually since 1954 with a Swarna Kamal, where Bengali films lead with 23 wins and Satyajit Ray..."
url: https://www.nationalfilmawards.in/best-feature-film-national-award/
date: 2026-06-12
modified: 2026-06-12
author: "Manu Faria"
image: https://www.nationalfilmawards.in/wp-content/uploads/2026/05/Best-Feature-Film-National-Award-Winners.webp
categories: ["Award"]
type: post
lang: en
---

# Best Feature Film National Award Winners: All Years Database

The **National Film Award for Best Feature Film is India’s most prestigious cinema prize awarded annually since 1954 with a Swarna Kamal, where Bengali films lead with 23 wins and Satyajit Ray holds the director record with 6 wins**.

This definitive database covers every winning film from 1954 to 2026. It provides a complete 70-year winners list, analyzes language dominance trends, maps Satyajit Ray’s historical dynasty, explains the unique 1978 anomaly, and explores the modern regional cinema renaissance.

!(https://nationalfilmawards.in/wp-content/uploads/2026/05/Best-Feature-Film-National-Award-Winners-1024x546.webp)

---

**Table of Contents**

1. What Is the Best Feature Film National Award?
2. Complete Best Feature Film Winners List (1954 to 2026)
3. Which Language Has Won the Best Feature Film Award the Most?
4. Satyajit Ray: The Undisputed Record Holder
5. The Only Year No Award Was Given: 1978
6. The Modern Regional Cinema Renaissance (2015 to 2023)
7. When Was the Best Feature Film Award Shared Between Two Films?
8. Notable Language Milestones and Unique Winners
9. Frequently Asked Questions About the Best Feature Film Award

---

## What Is the Best Feature Film National Award?

The **Best Feature Film National Award is India’s highest film honor originally called the President’s Gold Medal, which awards a Swarna Kamal trophy and Rs 3,00,000 in cash each to both the producer and the director of the winning film**.

The Government of India instituted this award in 1954. The founders originally named it the President’s Gold Medal for the All India Best Feature Film. They designed the honor to recognize films that display high aesthetic and technical standards while offering significant educational or cultural value.

The jury presents the award at the annual National Film Awards ceremony held at Vigyan Bhawan in New Delhi. The President of India personally hands over the trophy to the winners.

The prize structure reflects the collaborative nature of cinema. The government recognizes both the financial architect and the creative architect of the film. Therefore, both the producer and the director receive their own separate Swarna Kamal (Golden Lotus) trophy. They also each receive a cash prize of Rs 3,00,000.

This award differs from the Dadasaheb Phalke Award. The Dadasaheb Phalke Award honors a complete lifetime of work by an individual. The Best Feature Film award honors a single, specific movie released in a specific calendar year.

The competition for this award is intense. A central jury evaluates over 200 feature films from across the country every year. They watch films in dozens of regional languages before selecting the single best cinematic achievement in India.

Read the (/national-film-awards/) to understand how this category fits within the larger festival structure.

---

## Complete Best Feature Film Winners List (1954 to 2026)

The **National Film Awards have honored 70 films with the Swarna Kamal from Shyamchi Aai in 1954 to 12th Fail in 2023, representing the finest achievements in Indian cinema history across seven decades**.

The following database provides the complete, historically verified list of all Best Feature Film winners. The “Award Year” indicates the calendar year the film was certified, while the “Edition” marks the specific National Film Awards ceremony.

| Award Year | Edition | Film | Language | Director |
| --- | --- | --- | --- | --- |
| **1953** | 1st | **Shyamchi Aai** | Marathi | Pralhad Keshav Atre |
| 1954 | 2nd | Mirza Ghalib | Hindi | Sohrab Modi |
| **1955** | 3rd | **Pather Panchali** | Bengali | Satyajit Ray |
| 1956 | 4th | Kabuliwala | Bengali | Tapan Sinha |
| 1957 | 5th | Do Aankhen Barah Haath | Hindi | V. Shantaram |
| 1958 | 6th | Sagar Sangamey | Bengali | Debaki Bose |
| 1959 | 7th | Apur Sansar | Bengali | Satyajit Ray |
| 1960 | 8th | Anuradha | Hindi | Hrishikesh Mukherjee |
| 1961 | 9th | Bhagini Nivedita | Bengali | Bijoy Bose |
| 1962 | 10th | Dada Thakur | Bengali | Sudhir Mukherjee |
| 1963 | 11th | Shehar Aur Sapna | Hindi | Khwaja Ahmad Abbas |
| **1964** | 12th | **Charulata** | Bengali | Satyajit Ray |
| 1965 | 13th | Chemmeen | Malayalam | Ramu Kariat |
| 1966 | 14th | Teesri Kasam | Hindi | Basu Bhattacharya |
| 1967 | 15th | Hatey Bazarey | Bengali | Tapan Sinha |
| 1968 | 16th | Goopy Gyne Bagha Byne | Bengali | Satyajit Ray |
| **1969** | 17th | **Bhuvan Shome** | Hindi | Mrinal Sen |
| 1970 | 18th | Samskara | Kannada | Pattabhirama Reddy |
| 1971 | 19th | Seemabaddha | Bengali | Satyajit Ray |
| 1972 | 20th | Swayamvaram | Malayalam | Adoor Gopalakrishnan |
| 1973 | 21st | Nirmalyam | Malayalam | M. T. Vasudevan Nair |
| 1974 | 22nd | Chorus | Bengali | Mrinal Sen |
| 1975 | 23rd | Chomana Dudi | Kannada | B. V. Karanth |
| 1976 | 24th | Mrigayaa | Hindi | Mrinal Sen |
| 1977 | 25th | Ghatashraddha | Kannada | Girish Kasaravalli |
| 1978 | 26th | *(No award given)* | – | – |
| 1979 | 27th | Shodh | Hindi | Biplab Raychaudhuri |
| 1980 | 28th | Akaler Shandhaney | Bengali | Mrinal Sen |
| 1981 | 29th | Dakhal | Bengali | Gautam Ghose |
| 1982 | 30th | Chokh | Bengali | Utpalendu Chakrabarty |
| **1983** | 31st | **Adi Shankaracharya** | Sanskrit | G. V. Iyer |
| 1984 | 32nd | Damul | Hindi | Prakash Jha |
| 1985 | 33rd | Chidambaram | Malayalam | G. Aravindan |
| 1986 | 34th | Tabarana Kathe | Kannada | Girish Kasaravalli |
| 1987 | 35th | Halodhia Choraye Baodhan Khai | Assamese | Jahnu Barua |
| 1988 | 36th | Piravi | Malayalam | Shaji N. Karun |
| 1989 | 37th | Bagh Bahadur | Bengali | Buddhadeb Dasgupta |
| 1990 | 38th | Marupakkam | Tamil | K. S. Sethumadhavan |
| 1991 | 39th | Agantuk | Bengali | Satyajit Ray |
| 1992 | 40th | Bhagwat Gita | Sanskrit | G. V. Iyer |
| 1993 | 41st | Charachar | Bengali | Buddhadeb Dasgupta |
| 1994 | 42nd | Unishe April | Bengali | Rituparno Ghosh |
| 1995 | 43rd | Kathapurushan | Malayalam | Adoor Gopalakrishnan |
| 1996 | 44th | Lal Darja | Bengali | Buddhadeb Dasgupta |
| 1997 | 45th | Thaayi Saheba | Kannada | Girish Kasaravalli |
| 1998 | 46th | Samar | Hindi | Shyam Benegal |
| 1999 | 47th | Vaanaprastham | Malayalam | Shaji N. Karun |
| 2000 | 48th | Shantham | Malayalam | Jayaraj |
| 2001 | 49th | Dweepa | Kannada | Girish Kasaravalli |
| 2002 | 50th | Mondo Meyer Upakhyan | Bengali | Buddhadeb Dasgupta |
| 2003 | 51st | Shwaas | Marathi | Sandeep Sawant |
| 2004 | 52nd | Page 3 | Hindi | Madhur Bhandarkar |
| 2005 | 53rd | Kaalpurush | Bengali | Buddhadeb Dasgupta |
| 2006 | 54th | Pulijanmam | Malayalam | Priyanandanan |
| 2007 | 55th | Kanchivaram | Tamil | Priyadarshan |
| 2008 | 56th | Antaheen | Bengali | Aniruddha Roy Chowdhury |
| 2009 | 57th | Kutty Srank | Malayalam | Shaji N. Karun |
| 2010 | 58th | Adaminte Makan Abu | Malayalam | Salim Ahamed |
| **2011** | 59th | **Deool** | Marathi | Umesh Vinayak Kulkarni |
| **2011** | 59th | **Byari** | Beary | Suveeran |
| 2012 | 60th | Paan Singh Tomar | Hindi | Tigmanshu Dhulia |
| 2013 | 61st | Ship of Theseus | English / Hindi | Anand Gandhi |
| 2014 | 62nd | Court | Marathi / Hindi | Chaitanya Tamhane |
| **2015** | 63rd | **Baahubali: The Beginning** | Telugu | S. S. Rajamouli |
| 2016 | 64th | Kaasav | Marathi | Sumitra Bhave, Sunil Sukthankar |
| **2017** | 65th | **Village Rockstars** | Assamese | Rima Das |
| **2018** | 66th | **Hellaro** | Gujarati | Abhishek Shah |
| 2019 | 67th | Marakkar: Lion of the Arabian Sea | Malayalam | Priyadarshan |
| 2020 | 68th | Soorarai Pottru | Tamil | Sudha Kongara |
| 2021 | 69th | Rocketry: The Nambi Effect | Hindi / Tamil | R. Madhavan |
| **2022** | 70th | **Aattam** | Malayalam | Anand Ekarshi |
| **2023** | 71st | **12th Fail** | Hindi | Vidhu Vinod Chopra |

Explore the (/national-film-awards-winners/) master directory to view winners from every single category across these 70 editions.

---

## Which Language Has Won the Best Feature Film Award the Most?

**Bengali films have won the Best Feature Film award the most with 23 victories, followed by Hindi films with 16 wins and Malayalam films with 13 wins as of the 71st National Film Awards**.

The history of the Best Feature Film award provides a clear map of creative momentum in Indian cinema. Different languages have dominated different eras of the awards.

| Language | Total Wins | Recent Winner | Trend |
| --- | --- | --- | --- |
| **Bengali** | 23 | *Antaheen* (2008) | Declining (No wins since 2008) |
| **Hindi** | 16 | *12th Fail* (2023) | Steady (Frequent recent wins) |
| **Malayalam** | 13 | *Aattam* (2022) | Rising (Consistent quality leader) |
| **Kannada** | 6 | *Dweepa* (2001) | Steady historical presence |
| **Marathi** | 5 | *Kaasav* (2016) | Rising (Strong recent decade) |
| **Tamil** | 3 | *Soorarai Pottru* (2020) | Steady |
| **Assamese** | 2 | *Village Rockstars* (2017) | Rising independent presence |
| **Sanskrit** | 2 | *Bhagwat Gita* (1992) | Historical anomaly |
| **Telugu** | 1 | *Baahubali* (2015) | Rare winner in top category |
| **Gujarati** | 1 | *Hellaro* (2018) | Emerging |
| **Beary** | 1 | *Byari* (2011) | Single milestone |

Bengali cinema established absolute dominance during the first four decades of the awards. Directors like Satyajit Ray, Mrinal Sen, and Buddhadeb Dasgupta created a parallel cinema movement that juries consistently rewarded. However, Bengali cinema has not won the top prize since 2008.

Hindi cinema surged during the middle eras and has maintained a steady presence. It benefits from high production values and wide reach. Malayalam cinema has emerged as the most consistent modern powerhouse. Malayalam filmmakers frequently win for their grounded, realistic, and highly original storytelling.

Read the (/best-hindi-film-national-award/) guide to see which Hindi films won their specific language category even when missing the top Swarna Kamal.

---

## Satyajit Ray: The Undisputed Record Holder

**Satyajit Ray holds the record for most Best Feature Film wins by a single director with 6 victories from 1955 to 1991, spanning his entire career from his debut film to his final release**.

No director in the history of Indian cinema comes close to Satyajit Ray’s record in this specific category. The government honored him with the Swarna Kamal six times over a 36-year period. This proves his incredible consistency and artistic longevity.

| Winning Film | Award Year | NFA Edition | Context |
| --- | --- | --- | --- |
| *Pather Panchali* | 1955 | 3rd NFA | His debut film; changed Indian cinema globally. |
| *Apur Sansar* | 1959 | 7th NFA | The emotional conclusion to the legendary Apu Trilogy. |
| *Charulata* | 1964 | 12th NFA | Widely considered his absolute masterpiece of visual storytelling. |
| *Goopy Gyne Bagha Byne* | 1968 | 16th NFA | A brilliant fantasy musical that showcased his incredible versatility. |
| *Seemabaddha* | 1971 | 19th NFA | A sharp, critical look at corporate ambition in Calcutta. |
| *Agantuk* | 1991 | 39th NFA | His final feature film; a philosophical summary of his life beliefs. |

Juries consistently selected Ray’s work because he blended deep Indian cultural roots with universally understood human emotions. His films set the aesthetic standard for what the Best Feature Film award represents.

Buddhadeb Dasgupta and Girish Kasaravalli share the second-place record. Both directors have won the award four times. However, Ray’s six-win dynasty remains untouched.

Browse the (/best-director-national-award/) to see the filmmakers who excelled specifically in directorial craft.

---

## The Only Year No Award Was Given: 1978

The **1978 Best Feature Film award was the only instance in 70 years where the National Film Awards jury declared no film worthy of the Swarna Kamal at the 26th NFA, making it a unique historical anomaly**.

The National Film Awards have run continuously since 1954 with only one glaring gap in the record books. During the 26th National Film Awards honoring films released in 1978, the central jury made a shocking decision.

The jury evaluated all submitted feature films from across the country. After extensive deliberation, they concluded that none of the entries met the high aesthetic and cultural standards required for the nation’s top cinema prize. They chose to leave the Best Feature Film category blank.

This decision sent a massive shockwave through the Indian film industry. It proved the absolute independence of the National Film Awards jury. They refused to lower their standards simply to fill a quota.

The awards resumed normally the following year. At the 27th NFA honoring films from 1979, the jury awarded the Swarna Kamal to the Hindi film *Shodh* directed by Biplab Raychaudhuri. The 1978 blank space remains a fascinating testament to the rigor of the selection process.

Read the (/national-film-awards-history/) to discover other controversies and milestones from the 1970s.

---

## The Modern Regional Cinema Renaissance (2015 to 2023)

**From 2015 to 2023, the Best Feature Film award went to regional language films from Assam, Gujarat, Malayalam, and Marathi in seven out of nine editions, signaling a decisive shift in jury priorities away from mainstream Bollywood**.

The last decade of the National Film Awards highlights a thrilling evolution in Indian cinema. The highest honor in the country has aggressively shifted toward regional cinema industries outside of Mumbai.

This modern renaissance proves that massive budgets are no longer required to win the Swarna Kamal. Juries are seeking authentic, culturally rooted storytelling.

- **2015:** *Baahubali: The Beginning* (Telugu) – A rare commercial blockbuster exception.

- **2016:** *Kaasav* (Marathi) – An intimate drama about depression and conservation.

- **2017:** *Village Rockstars* (Assamese) – An independent, zero-budget film shot by a single woman.

- **2018:** *Hellaro* (Gujarati) – A powerful story of women finding their voice through dance.

- **2019:** *Marakkar* (Malayalam) – A massive historical epic.

- **2020:** *Soorarai Pottru* (Tamil) – An inspiring biographical drama.

- **2022:** *Aattam* (Malayalam) – A brilliant, dialogue-driven chamber piece about gender politics.

*Village Rockstars* remains the most stunning example of this trend. Rima Das directed, shot, and edited the film herself with local children in her village. It defeated massive studio productions to win the Swarna Kamal. *Hellaro* achieved a similar breakthrough by becoming the very first Gujarati film to ever win the top prize.

Review the [70th National Film Awards complete winners](/70th-national-film-awards/) to see how *Aattam* dominated the most recent regional sweep.

---

## When Was the Best Feature Film Award Shared Between Two Films?

The **Best Feature Film award has been shared between two films on at least five occasions, including the 59th NFA where Deool (Marathi) and Byari (Beary) were declared joint winners**.

The National Film Awards regulations allow the central jury to declare a tie for the top prize if they find two films equally deserving. This happens rarely, but it ensures that exceptional cinema does not go unrecognized due to simple vote splitting.

The most famous modern example occurred at the 59th National Film Awards honoring films from 2011. The jury faced a brilliant Marathi social satire named *Deool* and a groundbreaking film named *Byari*. *Byari* was the very first feature film ever made in the Beary language of Karnataka. The jury could not choose between them.

They declared both films the joint winners of the Best Feature Film award. In these situations, the government does not split the prize. The producers and directors of both films each receive a full Swarna Kamal trophy. They also each receive the full Rs 3,00,000 cash prize.

Check the [71st National Film Awards complete winners](/71st-national-film-awards/) list to see if any recent categories resulted in joint winners.

---

## Notable Language Milestones and Unique Winners

**Adi Shankaracharya (1983) and Bhagwat Gita (1992) are the only two Sanskrit-language films to ever win the Best Feature Film award at the National Film Awards, marking unique milestones in cinema history**.

The database of winners highlights the incredible linguistic diversity of India. While Bengali, Hindi, and Malayalam dominate the total count, several unique language milestones stand out.

Director G. V. Iyer achieved something truly remarkable. He directed *Adi Shankaracharya*, the first ever feature film made entirely in Sanskrit. It won the Best Feature Film award for 1983. Nine years later, he directed *Bhagwat Gita*, also in Sanskrit. It won the Best Feature Film award for 1992. These remain the only two Sanskrit films to win the top prize.

Assamese cinema secured its first top prize in 1987 with *Halodhia Choraye Baodhan Khai* directed by Jahnu Barua. It took exactly 30 years for Assamese cinema to win again with *Village Rockstars* in 2017.

Gujarati cinema had to wait 65 years. The industry finally secured its very first Best Feature Film award with *Hellaro* in 2018. The Beary language won with its very first film ever produced. These milestones prove that a great story can emerge from any language in the country.

Explore the (/best-malayalam-film-national-award/) page to see the regional winners that built the foundation for Malayalam cinema’s current dominance.

---

### Frequently Asked Questions About the Best Feature Film Award

#### Who receives the Swarna Kamal for Best Feature Film?

**Both the producer and the director receive the Swarna Kamal for Best Feature Film.** The government honors both the financial creator and the creative architect. They each receive their own physical trophy and a cash prize of Rs 3,00,000.

#### Has any film won Best Feature Film more than once?

**No film can win Best Feature Film more than once.** The award honors films released and certified within a specific calendar year. Once a film competes in its eligible year, it cannot be submitted or awarded again in subsequent years.

#### Can a film in English win the Best Feature Film award?

**Yes, a film in English can win the Best Feature Film award if it is produced in India.** The film *Ship of Theseus* (2013), which features dialogue in English alongside Hindi and other languages, won the Best Feature Film award.

#### Who has won the Best Feature Film award the most times as a director?

**Satyajit Ray has won the Best Feature Film award the most times as a director.** He won the top prize six times over his career for films including *Pather Panchali*, *Charulata*, and *Agantuk*, setting an undisputed record in Indian cinema history.

#### What year was the Best Feature Film award not given?

**The Best Feature Film award was not given in 1978.** During the 26th National Film Awards, the central jury determined that no submitted film met the required aesthetic and cultural standards, leaving the category blank for the only time in history.

---

##### Discover More National Film Awards Coverage

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

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

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

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

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