Tag: Biyi Bandele

  • Nigeria’s Faraday Okoro, Biyi Bandele win $1million Tribeca film grant

    Nigeria’s Faraday Okoro, Biyi Bandele win $1million Tribeca film grant

    For their effort in a proposed new movie on Nigerian email scammers, ‘Nigerian Prince’, the writer and director, Faraday Okoro and producers; Biyi Bandele and Oscar Hernandez-Topete, have won a $1million AT&T grant at the Tribeca Film Festival in New York.
    ‘Nigerian Prince’ was announced winner on Thursday, April 19 at the film fiesta after a hard-fought pitching session tagged ‘AT&T Presents: Untold Stories’ featuring scripts from four other talented filmmakers.
    The winning movie script swayed a Greenlight committee led by Fiona Carter, AT&T Chief Brand Officer, after listening to a pitch on its story idea, budget and film script. Also listed in the committee were Hollywood actors Jeffrey Wright and Anthony Mackie, Josh Deutsch (Chairman and CEO, Downtown Records), Lee Daniels (Film Producer), Len Amato (President, HBO Films) and Frida Torresblanco (Film Producer).
    The session was the first edition of the AT&T and Tribeca new film initiative.
    AT&T will provide funding of up to $1 million for Faraday Okoro and Biyi Bandele to make the film, and Tribeca will provide mentorship from seasoned industry professionals. In addition, AT&T plans to distribute the winning film across several of its video platforms, including DIRECTV NOW, AT&T’s streaming over-the-top service.
    ‘Nigerian Prince’ is based on the notorious email scams that have proved a plague to both local and international law authorities. The plot centres around a stubborn Nigerian-America teenager who is sent to Nigeria against his will. Things take an unexpected turn when the protagonist joins forces with an internet scammer, in order to return to the United States.
    Biyi Bandele is a famous Nigerian filmmaker, novelist and playwright. He made his directorial debut film Half of a Yellow Sun which was screened at the 2013 Toronto International Film Festival and Fifty which screened at the London Film Festival, both of them earning international critical-acclaim in Nigeria and the UK. The director signed with the Temple Management Company in January.
    Faraday is a New York-based Nigerian filmmaker. In 2016, Faraday was included in MovieMaker Magazine’s 25 Screenwriters to Watch.

  • “Nigerian Prince” proposed movie on scammers wins $1m grant

    “Nigerian Prince” proposed movie on scammers wins $1m grant

    “Nigerian Prince”, a proposed movie on email scammers, has won a one million dollar AT&T grant at the Tribeca Film Festival.

    The movie, written and directed by Nigeria’s Biyi Bandele and Oscar Herndez-Topete, was announced the winner on April 20, at the Film Festival in New York.

    According to media reports AT&T will provide funding of up to one million for Bandele to create his movie.

    Tribeca will also provide mentorship from seasoned industry professionals.

    The telecommunications conglomerate also plans to distribute the winning film across several of its video platforms.

    Nigerian Prince is based on the notorious email scams from Nigerians.

    It’s centered on a stubborn Nigerian-American teenager sent back to Nigeria against his will.

    Things take another turn when he joins forces with an Internet scammer in order to return to the United States.

    Bandele is a Nigerian novelist, playwright and filmmaker.

    His directorial debut film “Half of a Yellow Sun” was screened in the Special Presentation section at the 2013 Toronto International Film Fesval while his other movie, “Fifty” was included in the 2015 London Film Festival.

    Bandele also directed the third season of the popular MTV drama series, “Shuga”.

     

  • Grammy winner Lekan Babalola, Biyi Bandele sign with TMC

    GRAMMY winner and renowned percussionist, Lekan Babalola and notable filmmaker, Biyi Bandele have signed new deals with talent agency, Temple Management Company.

    The two-time Grammy award-winning musician as well as the Half of a Yellow Sun director signed their deals separately in London where they are both based.

    Lekan Babalola, who has been described as a “wizardly percussionist” by the Washington Post, is one of Nigeria’s biggest music exports. He has worked with many renowned acts such as the late Prince, Cassandra Wilson, Ernest Ranglin, Branford Marsalis, African Jazz All Stars, Roy Ayers, David Byrne, Damon Albarn and Tony Allen.

    “I am delighted to work with The Temple Management Company and I strongly believe the company’s contribution to my artistic success in Nigeria and Africa is highly important and I look forward to the partnership,” Babalola said.

    “I became sold when I stumbled on the impressive way that TMC executed the King Sunny Ade Sunny On Sunday Concert and I believe that TMC’s involvement is a pre-requisite for the success of my artistic career in Nigeria and Africa.”

    On his part, Biyi Bandele expressed optimism describing his new deal as a strategic synergy that will raise the bar in the African creative sector.

    “I have been looking for representation not only for my film work but also to engage in commercial opportunities across Africa,” he said.

    “Temple is the perfect fit and I believe we can export world class entertainment from the continent to the rest of the world.”

    Mr. Idris Olorunnimbe, CEO/ Founder, noted that Temple Management Company will work with Lekan Babalola and Biyi Bandele to put Nigeria on the map of the international jazz and film circuit respectively. Also lending his voice, Mark Redguard, TMC’s Head of Entertainment said the opportunities are limitless to work with two of the biggest creative forces out of Nigeria to the world.

    Since it set up shop in March, 2016, the Temple Management Company which boasts of a team of young professionals has offices in Lagos and Nairobi as well as a presence in London, New York and Johannesburg has positioned itself as one of the foremost players operating in the creative sector in Nigeria and Africa.

  • Half of a Yellow Sun character posters out

    Half of a Yellow Sun character posters out

    The producers of Half of a Yellow Sun, a Biyi Bandele’s adaptation of Chimamanda Adichie’s Half of a Yellow Sun, have now released the character posters, as the flick hits cinemas across Nigeria on April 25.

    According to reports, the posters are for Chiwetel Ejiofor, Onyeka Onwenu, Genevieve Nnaji, Thandie Newton, Anika Noni Rose and OC Ukeje.

    The movie tells the story of twin sisters, Olanna (Thandie Newton) and Kainene (Anika Noni Rose) who return to Nigeria after their education in England. They make decisions that shock their family. Olanna moves in with her lover, the ‘revolutionary professor’ Odenigbo (Chiwetel Ejiofor) and his houseboy, Ugwu (John Boyega), while Kainene takes over the family interests and pursues a career as a businesswoman, falling in love with Richard (Joseph Mawle), an English writer.

    As the Igbo people struggle to establish Biafra as an independent Republic, the sisters become caught up in the shocking violence of the Nigerian Civil War and a betrayal that threatens their family forever.

     

  • Will it be watched at home with fresh eyes and open minds?

    Will it be watched at home with fresh eyes and open minds?

    It was with great expectations and even much greater anxieties that on Wednesday this week I went to a private screening of Biyi Bandele’s film adaptation of Chimamanda Adichie’s prize-winning novel on the Nigeria-Biafra war, Half of a Yellow Sun. The “expectations” can be quickly or summarily expressed. Both the filmmaker and the novelist rank very high in my estimation. Adichie is now one of the most deservedly world famous authors in contemporary literature and Half of a Yellow Sun is one of her best works. The occasion of its adaptation for the big screen of cinema in the highways and upper levels of popular culture and not the alleyways and side streets of video films is therefore an occasion that excites great expectation. Add to this the fact that though Biyi Bandele who adopted the novel for the screen is an accomplished playwright, this is his debut film, his first venture into the rarefied world of movies optioned by very influential producers and made with big-name actors. [For truth in public discourse, I must state here that Biyi Bandele was my student at the University of Ibadan in the mid-1970s]

    For these reasons, I was immensely pleased that my great expectations were not disappointed and I left the cinema on Wednesday night very glad, very gratified that the film version of Adichie’s great novel is also a delightful and absorbing work. I understand that it will premiere in Lagos next week and bearing this in mind, I strongly recommend that everyone reading this piece should see the film if they happen to be in Lagos during its run there. It is precisely on the basis of this “recommendation” that I now go to the matter of the anxieties with which, side by side with the expectations, I set out to watch the film last Wednesday, especially since even after watching the films, the anxieties still remain. But before dealing with this issue, permit me to briefly discuss the things that I found delightful and compelling about the film.

    Most of those who watched the private screening of the films at Harvard on Wednesday had all almost certainly read Adichie’s novel. But in the marketplaces of popular cinema in the world at large, the vast majority of those who will see the film will not have read the novel. For this reason, the film must and will stand or fall on its own and cannot bank on the celebrity status of the novel and its writer. I am glad to report that it succeeds in doing this wonderfully, so much so that I expect that after watching the film, many of those who have not read Half of a Yellow Sun will be sufficiently piqued by how close to or different from novel is Bandele’s film that they will rush to read the novel. They will of course discover, either to their pleasure or disappointment, that the novel is far more complex than its film version. But that is beside the essential point being argued here. With very few exceptions, nearly all film adaptations of great works of literature do not match the depth and complexity, the unique perturbations and intimations in the original literary works. This is why, in the last instance, film versions of works of literature must stand or fall on their own. Not paying sufficient attention to this categorical imperative, many adapters of literary works for film use the reputation of the work or its author as a crutch to lean on and in the process fail woefully. Perhaps the most notorious example of this phenomenon is Chinua Achebe’s Things Fall Apart and its many film adaptations, not one of which is successful as film, as a work dependent on the mastery of the medium of film and its demands and satisfactions.

    Perhaps at the base of Bandele’s success in his film is his recognition that though its subject is an epochal historical event, Adichie’s novel is not a historical novel. This is because though it is fiercely faithful to depicting the harrowing and unforgettable effects of the historical event of the Nigeria-Biafra war on those who had to live through the war, the real strength of Adichie’s novel lies elsewhere. It lies in its ineffable ability to both capture the quotidian realities of life in the midst of devastating war and to plumb the depths of the conflicting inner drives and motivations of characters in whom the war brings out the best and the worst in them. In Bandele’s film these two aspects of the novel – the terrifying banality or ordinariness of the ravages of war and singularly driven characters for whom the war serves as a backdrop to who they really are and who they are striving to become – are realized powerfully without the slightest hint of exoticism, the bane of films made from novels on Africa or by Africans. Thus, where films on such novels as Things Fall Apart (Chinua Achebe), Cry the Beloved Country (Alan Paton), A Good Man in Africa (William Boyd) and Out of Africa (Karen Blixen) all failed to rise above the level of cliché and exoticism in depicting Africa as background and Africans as human subjects, Bandele’s film is, in my opinion, the first film in the genre to soar exultantly into the realm of unforced plausibility and warm, funny, intriguing and compelling presence of all the characters, African and European. Nollywood directors and actors will find a lot to learn from this film. This, in fact is the point of departure for the anxieties that I had about this film, anxieties that have not disappeared with the great pleasure and delight that I had in watching the film.

    If Bandele’s film succeeded in assuaging my anxiety about the tendency in Hollywood or British films based on novels on Africa or by Africans to exoticize the continent and its peoples, alas it did not allay my worries concerning the baleful effects of the popularity and influence of Nollywood on cinema audiences in Nigeria, the African continent and the Diaspora. At the screening of the film at Harvard where slightly under half of the audience was African or black, this influence of Nollywood was very palpable, very disconcerting. Every time that the Mother of Odenigbo, (the main male character in the novel and the film played by Chiwetel Ejiofor) spoke, the majority of the Africans in the audience either burst into raucous laughter or tittered uncontrollably, even though how she spoke and what she spoke about did not entail comedy. In time, I became very conscious in the “racial” division in the audience response to this character’s role in the film: blacks laughed all the time; the whites were silent or perhaps mystified and querulous about the laughter. Personally, I was greatly inconvenienced by the fact that one of the loudest of the laughers was sitting right next to me! It did not matter that this role of the Mother was played by Onyeka Onwenu with verve but also with nuance and with dignity in the second half of the film; every time the Mother appeared laughter erupted. There is not the slightest doubt in my mind that the voluble, completely unselfconscious laughers did not and could not see Onyeka in the role; what they saw was Patience Ozokwor, the Nollywood essence of Mothers and Mother-in-laws as insufferable shrewish termagants.

    Let me hasten to say that I am not making too much of this laughter around one single character. What I saw, what troubled me was the fact that, as soon as she appeared in the film, this character’s presumed essence became the benchmark for the response to the whole film. Laugher, loud comments, voluble talking back to characters became commonplace in the response to the film. And in nearly all cases, these responses trivialized the film and its brilliant, compelling probing of existential and social issues of great moral and psychological weight that the war bequeathed to us, as represented by Adichie’s novel and Bandele’s adaptation of it for film. In this particular case, my anxiety is this: after Nollywood, can serious and engaging cinema in our country hope for and get popular audiences who will watch films with fresh eyes and open minds?

    This question, which indeed provides the title for this piece, is all the more vital given the fact that the film is after all about the Biafra-Nigeria civil war which is second to no other historical event or crisis in postindependence Nigeria in causing wrenching divisions between us concerning both its prosecution and its legacies for the present and the future. The concrete terms in which this pertains to Bandele’s film can be gauged by the controversies that erupted after the publication of Achebe’s last book, There Was A Country. Thus, following those controversies around Achebe’s book, the question that is the title of this piece can be applied to the film: will it be watched at home in Nigeria with fresh eyes and open minds where Achebe’s last book failed to produce such freshness and openness? I certainly hope that it does.

    Like Adichie’s novel, Bandele’s film is pro-Biafra. But also like Adichie’s novel this film cannot be reduced to a pro-Biafra tract. As in Adichie’s wonderful novel in which only the most narrow and intractable anti-Biafra and anti-Igbo zealot will fail to respond to the evocation and probing of common, universal failures and strengths, Bandele’s film takes us beyond narrow and intractable divisions of ethnicity, religion and region to inner recesses of the heart and the mind that are common to all of us. If this film can take its audiences at home to these regions of the heart and the mind, perhaps, but only perhaps we might be able to seriously begin to engage the legacies of the civil war with fresh eyes and open minds.

    But then, first of all, Bandele’s film has to get past the invisible but impregnable obstacles set up by Nollywood. Oh, Patience Ozokwor and your countless Nollywood partners-in-cinema-yamayama, what great obstacles thou hath all unwittingly wrought in separating complexity from healthy laughter, depth from comic frivolity and nuance from mindless joviality!

    Biodun Jeyifo

    bjeyifo@fas.harvard.edu

  • CHIWETEL EJIOFOR- ‘I’m happy as actor and man’

    CHIWETEL EJIOFOR- ‘I’m happy as actor and man’

    This year’s Toronto International Film Festival welcomed many actors with more than one film to promote. Chiwetel Ejiofor, who, thanks to his commanding performances in Biyi Bandele’s Half of a Yellow Sun and Steve McQueen’s 12 Years a Slave, attracted more attention, among audiences and critics alike, than Benedict Cumberbatch, Jesse Eisenberg, and Colin Firth combined. In Bandele’s adaptation of Nigerian author Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie’s novel, set in Nigeria during the Biafra War, the actor appears as a politically motivated professor who flees his home with his family as tensions intensify between the Hausa and Igbo people. And in McQueen’s hotly anticipated drama, he stars as the real-life Solomon Northup, an African-American freeman who was kidnapped and spent 12 years in slavery. Ejiofor, born in Britain and of Nigerian descent, mostly works in the States, and he brings his profound sense of worldliness to these two parts. I met with him in Toronto to talk about how he transitions between roles, the allure of Los Angeles, and how it feels to be the center of so much Oscar buzz.

    DO you remember the moment when you thought to yourself, “It’s decided. I’m going to be an actor”?

    I did my first play when I was maybe 15. I didn’t make a decision to become an actor. Actually, I still haven’t officially. I just keep on doing it and then people ended up calling me that. The point was when somebody offered to pay me for it! [Laughs] I thought, “Okay, so I can do something that I love and get paid for it. I guess that makes me a professional.” My father was a doctor, but also a musician, so we had that creative element in the family. If I’m connected to the work and experience I find it a very rewarding and enriching way to spend my life.

    Was it difficult for a Londoner like yourself to adjust to the Los Angeles lifestyle?

    I [still] live both in London and L.A. Because I did Amistad when I was 19, I’ve already been [in Hollywood] for quite a long time. And I have people [around me] that I’ve known for a very long time there. It always seemed to me like Hollywood is a sort of alter-ego of Los Angeles. L.A. in itself is actually this beautiful place where there’s lots of places to hike, surf, swim. I like getting out there. I like swimming, love sailing, so I really enjoy the outdoorsy nature of L.A. I also like the people. Californians have this chilled-out vibe. It’s a very interesting place to be.

    What drew you to Half of a Yellow Sun?

    I’ve known Biyi Bandele [the film’s director] for many years. We’ve talked about a possibility of going back to Nigeria and making a film for a long time. Then this beautiful book came out, so it was a perfect mixture of events. It was a deeply personal experience. Because not only are my parents Nigerian, but also Igbo [an ethnic group from southeastern Nigeria] and from the exact region then that all the events of the film take place. I feel [African], but also distinctly Igbo. The south is a very specific place in Nigeria. I love being there. So the events [civil war-related] in the film happened to my own family. This part of our history is very defining. The Biafran War was the first one covered by media, and the first images of the starving children later associated with Africa now were taken then. It was the first time people saw Africa in terms of a humanitarian crisis. This war was also the reason why my family left and went first to Paris and then to London. This is the reason why now I speak like this.

    You were born in London. Have you been to Nigeria before?

    Many times. I used to spend my summers there when I was a kid. As an adult, every couple of years. I recorded interviews with my grandfather, 10-hour long conversations, before he died. I’ve always had a long and fruitful relationship [with Nigeria].

    What was the time span in between this film and 12 Years a Slave?

    I shot Half of a Yellow Sun immediately before 12 Years a Slave. In fact, I flew from Calabar to Louisiana. I was excited about doing both films. It was an interesting transition: The last place I visited in Calabar was the slave museum. Hundreds of thousands of Igbo, every decade for about 200 years, were taken out of this region and transported to America, a lot of them ending specifically in Louisiana. So in a strange way, even though obviously I flew there, I was following the route of those people…and then telling this other story of slavery. It felt very connected.

    You’ve already portrayed a slave in Amistad. How was the experience different this time?

    It was completely different. Amistad was a court case. This is talking to and about the specifics of [Solomon Northup’s] life. When I was making 12 Years a Slave, I didn’t reach back to that experience. It didn’t feel connected.

    Watching a story like this one, one keeps wondering how humans can be so savage.

    We carry on doing that, just in different ways and in different places. We use violence as a way of making money, sadly. That’s what we do and have been doing for a very long time. If that’s the premise of any given society then you’re going to have situations like that. Wars, slavery of some form or another.

    How do you feel about the Oscar talk surrounding the film?

    I think it’s great when people respond to the film in a positive way. But I’d say I’m always a bit suspicious of words like “buzz” or “hype.” The film, and Northup’s story, deserve sort of a little reflection. I’m worried of all those things being put onto the film before it’s even out, before anybody’s had a chance to sort of breathe with it a little bit. Northup’s autobiography is one of the most devastating, inspiring, beautiful, and haunting things that I’ve ever read or been involved in. I’m glad that people are excited, but they should watch it with their own eyes, without any expectations. Just see his story, the story we’re trying to tell.

    12 Years a Slave has been tipped as the Schindler’s List of black experience. How do you feel about such comparisons?

    You could look at it as a specific history lesson if you like, because it speaks to that as well. It’s a very detailed, brilliant, firsthand account of what was happening at that time. And it’s Northup’s gift to the modern day, that we can have a day-in-day-out access to what occurred in that period of time. I feel it should be in every school in the world; it’s an extraordinary piece of literature. But also it speaks to human respect. And I feel like this is what people take away from it, a story about human respect, and that’s a great thing for young people or anybody to reflect on.

    You said Half of a Yellow Sun and 12 Years a Slave were shot one right after another, but you look very different in them.

    I always find that if you put your mind in a different place, you end up sort of physically changing. I probably weighed exactly the same in both of the movies, but the characters’ attitude, worldview, the way they hold themselves was so different, that when watching those two films one might think my weight has changed. But it’s just because I’m carrying myself differently. I always find that the way into a character is physicalthat you’re body changes as your outlook changes in terms of the character.

    How was working with Sean Bobbit, Steve McQueen’s cinematographer?

    Sean is extraordinary in his detail and what he’s able to capture and the beautiful way he works and shoots with the light is purely amazing. And actually the two of them, Steve and Sean are this amazing combination in the first place.

    Steve McQueen claims, “There are actors and there are artists.” Which one are you?

    I don’t necessarily think of myself in those terms. I suppose I like his idea [laughs]. Obviously, what we’re involved in is an art form, and for me it’s always been a very fascinating one, because it’s about self-expression and using yourself as a conduit to express other things. Your body, your mind, your voice, what you’re giving. I’ve always thought it was very interesting, ever since I started acting.

    Happy actor, happy man?

    I don’t know if these two are connected. I think they are separate, maybe. You can be happy in your acting life and miserable at home, or happy in both places, or miserable in both. I am happy in both, luckily.