Tag: cinema

  • ‘Klippers’ set for the cinema

    All is set for the release of action-packed movie, ‘Klippers’ in cinemas across Nigeria on August 10. The movie is written and directed by US-based Nigerian filmmaker, Ofu Obekpa, who starred in ‘Captain America’, ‘Civil war’, and ‘Black Panther.’

    The movie is about an assassin sent by his psychotic employer to kill his ex-wife. In his quest to accomplish the task, the assassin becomes familiar with his target and this makes his mission rather difficult. His employer is impatient and senses that all is not well. In comes another hit man with an intimidating profile known who has a scary success record of getting the job done. A series of events triggers a face off and the race to stay alive begins.

    In the movie, Ofu stars alongside WWE legend Kevin Nash, formerly known as Diesel (John Wick, Magic Mike XXL), Nigerian International seasoned actor, Conphidance, known for his role in the Emmy Award winning TV series ‘Atlanta’, ‘The Inspectors’, Libby Blanton (Dark Roads 79, Push), Francine Locke (Nashville, Risky Business) and Robert Pralgo (Furious 7, Avengers: Infinity war).

    Read Also: Nollywood Aki honoured in Miami, Florida

    “Nothing good comes easy and only those who step out of their comfort zone determined to actualize their dreams can make it,” said Obekpa

    “I was fully aware of this especially taking the highly competitive movie terrain into consideration. I ensured I wrote a good screenplay which Kevin Nash and other Hollywood Celebrity actors could not resist and wanted to be a part of. I also drew heavily from what I learnt in the Film Connection from my mentor, Kevin Christopher of Rite Media in Atlanta. The rest as they say is history and I’m elated that Nigerians will watch an action packed movie that they can be proud of.”

    After its Nigerian run, ‘Klippers’ which is powered by Skyrunner productions will also be watched in Czech Republic, Japan, France, Russia, Poland, Brazil and Spain.

  • Saudi Arabia explores cinema freedom

    INDICATIONS emerge recently, of a potentially rapid cinema business in Saudi Arabia, a country just coming out of a 35-year ban from the silver screen.

    Recall that Marvel’s superhero blockbuster ‘Black Panther’, opened the first movie theater in Saudi Arabia on April 18, ending the nearly four-decade ban on cinemas.

    Making its debut at the Cannes Film Festival this year, the country has no doubt hit the ground, running – with a pavilion that is the talk of town and plethora of coordinated activities which include panel discussions and roundtable conferences featuring both regional and international film figures.

    The country has demonstrated its deep passion for film business, by not just acquiring one of the top three largest pavilions in Cannes, but has a total of 46 delegates from the General Culture Authority and Saudi Film Council, and film and production industry.

    The Saudi Film Council was on hand with a total of 228 minutes of Saudi short films screenings, while also highlighting about 13 Saudi provinces as film locations.

    The country also announced generous rebates for film production in the Kingdom. This include a 35 per cent rebate on all general spending on productions filmed in the Kingdom, rising to a hefty 50 per cent rebate for spend on Saudi labour. Pundits say the rebates put the fledgling film industry in competition with regional media hub rivals, including Abu Dhabi, which offers a 30 per cent rebate, and Morocco, which has a 20 per cent rebate incentive.

    Ahmad Al-Maziad, CEO of Saudi’s General Culture Authority describes the incentive as “a call to come and shoot in Saudi, to enjoy the scenery and the people,” adding that the rebate is not only for feature films, but to animation, documentaries and scripted series.

    Saudi Arabia also used the festival to announce a production partnership with Abu Dhabi’s Image Nation. The agreement includes four feature films, which will be produced by both O3 Productions, the production arm of the Saudi-government-controlled MBC, and Oscar-winning Abu Dhabi production house Image Nation.

  • Canon showcases tech for broadcast, cinema

    Canon showcases tech for broadcast, cinema

    Canon has showcased its latest industry-leading innovations at CABSAT 2018, the leading broadcast, satellite and creative event in the Middle East and Africa region. The leader in imaging solutions also provided visitors with the opportunity to experience its full range of security solutions, Pro Video portfolio and professional imaging products first-hand at dedicated shooting areas and end to end workflow scenarios.

    At the three-day event, Canon unveiled the latest additions to its Pro-Video segment with the launch of its 4K XF Series cameras, XF405 and XF400, which are in addition to the recent launch of the EOS C200, the 4K compact digital cinema camera from the esteemed Cinema EOS range. Under the XA series, XA-11 and XA-15 mark their entry into the region along with the low light network camera with remarkable performance, the ME20F-SHN. The company also presented evolved and seamless workflow solutions, which enable more efficient and cost-effective production for broadcasters and filmmakers.

    Speaking at the event, Managing Director Canon Central and North Africa (CCNA), Roman Troedthandl, said: “Canon’s presence in CABSAT, which is considered to be one of the most important events in broadcast and media technology regionally and globally, is integral to showcasing our commitment towards playing a vital role in the cinema industry. Celebrating the incredible potential of filmmakers in Africa, Canon is set on clearing any hardships they may face enroute, through offering all the necessary technical and technological support they require, and this year we are going even further and extending our participation towards supporting young and aspiring filmmakers.

    “We also understand that there is an increasing integration of 4K into mainstream television dramas, documentaries and movies, and we are committed to continually evolving to meet the fluctuating needs of broadcasters and filmmakers with the latest additions to our innovative Cinema EOS series. As well as consistently strengthening and enhancing our partnerships with Tier 1 partners in markets like Nigeria, Morocco, West Africa and Egypt while hand in hand expanding our presence through an extended network of Tier 2 partners in Egypt, Nigeria and Morocco.”

    Designed to benefit broadcasters and filmmakers alike, the EOS C200 is the first Cinema EOS camera to feature the revolutionary Cinema RAW light format, which provides the same flexibility in colour grading as Cinema RAW in a smaller file size, enabling filmmakers to record internally to a CFast 2.0™ card.

     

     

  • Martin Scorsese leads effort to save lost African cinema

    Martin Scorsese leads effort to save lost African cinema

    Through the night, for many nights, Martin Scorsese sat ensconced in an edit suite. It was 1981 and the director was in post-production for “The King of Comedy,” his dark satire of the stand-up circuit.

    As he worked, a TV in the background pulsed with the sounds of Nass El Ghiwane, a Moroccan band and the subject of “Trances,” a concert movie by Ahmed El Maanouni. Over and over, night after night, the same channel repeated its broadcast, the film’s hypnotic rhythms seeping into the New Yorker’s soul.

    “It’s been an obsession of mine,” Scorsese has said. In the years since, he hunted down the band’s music, heaped praise on El Maanouni and in 2007 orchestrated a full restoration of the film.

    Scorsese is part of a generation that includes George Lucas and Francis Ford Coppola: titans of Hollywood who gorged on a diet of foreign cinema. Its influence is telling. Just as the samurai films of Akira Kurosawa filtered down into “Star Wars,” Ingmar Bergman’s picaresque narratives find a companion in “Apocalypse Now.” For Scorsese, African cinema comprised part of his vernacular.

    “Trances” was an inspiration behind 1988’s “The Last Temptation of Christ,” and elsewhere the director has described the “incredible impact” of “La Noire De…” (“Black Girl,” 1966) by Ousmane Sembene. First watched in 1969, the Senegalese movie “was unlike anything that I’d ever seen,” he recalled. “It was like a door had opened in the West and it was the first time we could feel a truly African voice in the cinema.”

    Scorsese took note, but not many heard this African voice, or its contemporaries — particularly in Africa itself. Part of the problem is distribution, another is politics, say advocates. The result is a generation of cinematic giants left in slumber, and vital pieces of cultural heritage missing.

    Now, an international effort including Scorsese is aiming to revive these figures — and revise what we thought we knew about African cinema.

    Lost, missing or hidden away

    Scorsese established The Film Foundation in 1990, a nonprofit dedicated to preserving and protecting historic cinema. A decade ago it launched the World Cinema Project, focusing on films outside the Western canon. It was around then that Scorsese took a trip to West Africa.

    “In 2007, I visited my friend (the director) Souleymane Cisse in Mali,” he told CNN. “Our discussions during that trip highlighted for me the urgent need to preserve African films, many of which are not known or even available, leaving a chasm in our understanding of world cinema.”

    The project has sought to fill this chasm, but so far African films remain outliers. Of over 750 restorations overseen by the foundation, only seven were from the continent at the beginning of 2017. That dynamic is changing, however.

    In June, the foundation, UNESCO and the Pan African Federation of Filmmakers, known as FEPACI, in collaboration with Cineteca di Bologna, signed an agreement formalizing the African Film Heritage Project, or AFHP. The initiative “will locate and preserve 50 African films, and make them available to audiences in Africa and around the world,” Scorsese explains.

    It’s a daunting task, agree all involved. Some of the films identified for restoration are, for all intents and purposes, lost. “If you Google search some of these titles nothing comes up,” says Margaret Bodde, executive director of the Film Foundation. “There’s no kind of writing about these films.”

    Very rarely were film negatives developed in Africa in the 1960s and ’70s, with most taken to laboratories in Europe or the United States. “Sometimes documentation is lost or never existed,” says Cecilia Cenciarelli, a curator at Cineteca di Bologna. It can take years of phone calls and emails to find a negative or 35 millimeter print. Often assets are incomplete and scattered, she adds, recalling a Soviet-era title where one reel was found in Cuba and the others in the former East Germany.

    Each restoration costs anywhere from $100,000-250,000 according to Bodde, which is expensive for a nonprofit. Negotiating access is an additional issue, says Aboubakar Sanogo, lecturer and North American regional secretary of FEPACI.

    “I won’t name the filmmaker, but one entity in Britain has been storing the films of an African filmmaker since the 1960s,” Sanogo says as an example. “He’s a filmmaker we’re interested in working on. That entity just said ‘…well you have to pay about £100,000 ($132,000).’”

    “This is completely unethical as far as I’m concerned, but these are some of the difficulties that we are going to be facing in the next decade.”

    ‘So important yet so unknown’

    The first fruits of the project came to light in May when “Soleil O” (“Oh, Sun,” 1970) screened at the Cannes Film Festival under the Cannes Classics sidebar.

    The debut feature by Mauritanian director Med Hondo “depicts issues that are still relevant today,” says Scorsese, describing to CNN “a powerful film about a young man who emigrates from West Africa to France in search of a better life. Instead he finds racism, hostility and hypocrisy.”

    “It’s a deeply personal film, based so entirely on Med Hondo’s own experience,” says Bodde. He’s typical of the directors the project is targeting. Lauded in Ouagadougou, Burkina Faso, the spiritual home of African cinema, Hondo, now 81 years old, is “so important yet so unknown,” says Cenciarelli. (His most-seen work has been as a voice actor in dubbed versions of “Shrek” and the “Star Wars” prequels.)

    “(Restoring “Soleil O”) seems a good way to start this project, by honoring a filmmaker who’s still alive, (who) contributed in a less classic way — a more avant-garde way — to building big chapters of (a) cultural revolution for Africa,” she says.

    Five more films have been earmarked for restoration, but the foundation is only now revealing the first two titles: “Le Vent des Aures” (“The Wind of the Aures,” 1967) by Algerian Mohammed Lakhdar-Hamina, and “La Femme au Couteau” (“Woman with the Knife,” 1969) by Ivorian Timite Bassori. Both will be the first titles from their countries restored through the foundation.

    “Restoration and preservation is really only half the battle,” said Scorsese in February. “African films need to be seen by the audiences they were intended for: the African people.” The aim is for the five films to screen at FESPACO in 2019, when Africa’s biggest film festival in Ouagadougou celebrates its 50th anniversary.

    But the festival circuit can only reach so far. “We want as many people to be exposed,” says Irina Bokova, director-general of UNESCO. “It’s very important … to work with African media, television providers, owners of cinemas, theaters, to show these films.”

    “We won’t be dogmatic,” Sanogo adds. Despite plans to create 35 millimeter prints, he describes the format as “dead,” outlining DVD, Blu-ray and streaming options for future releases.

    UNESCO will include AFHP titles as part of its Memory of the World Program and the General History of Africa, the latter “a giant project that UNESCO started in 1964 in order to deconstruct the false premises and prejudices attributed towards African history,” Bokova says.

    Some of these have arguably been formed or perpetuated in movie theaters.

    “From the beginning, African filmmakers were using cinema as a means to raise awareness about its past, about the aspirations of their people, about their histories, but also educating them to meet the challenges of newly found independence,” says the UNESCO director-general. But many films were left to gather dust far from home. Meanwhile, Sanogo speaks of a period of cultural neo-colonialism when “Hollywood used to dump their films on African countries,” undercutting homegrown productions with lower distribution costs.

    The absence of these self-determining African voices has left a void, and an opportunity for non-African filmmakers to impose a fanciful view of the continent: “a reductive mode of representation that we see in most European and American films, frankly,” says Sanogo. (China has recently shown willingness to imagine Africa as a war-torn playground, too.)

    Sanogo believes that if more people — and filmmakers — had access to African cinema, such stereotypes would be less pervasive on and off screen. “We always knew that Hollywood was the best ambassador for the US,” he adds. “We believe the same can be done with African cinema.”

    Part of the hope is that African filmmakers today will connect with their lost or forgotten cinematic roots. The slow burn of a Sembene film may be a world away from the cut and thrust of a Nollywood action flick, but there’s still a dialogue to be had between past and present.

    “Even if you view the films of Med Hondo and you’re going to take a completely different approach, that’s part of the vernacular,” argues Bodde. “Knowing history is part of the continuum of art.”

    By reclaiming its cinema, its stories and its history, Africa’s filmmakers of tomorrow will be creating from a firmer platform.

    “I’m aware, more than ever, that we know very little about African cinema,” Scorsese said at the launch of the project. We’re about to find out a lot more.

    Culled from CNN

  • LTV 8  debuts two-hour non-stop cinema

    LTV 8 debuts two-hour non-stop cinema

    • LTV 8: Determined to expand its scope

    The Lagos Television (LTV 8) is introducing new programmes to give its viewers value for their time. The programmes are in the entertainment and education sections, it was learnt yesterday.

    They include a two-hour Nollywood movies tagged: ‘Sinima O ‘Lopin’. It will be aired daily from 1pm to 3 pm.

    Its General Manager Mrs. Funke Moore said in a statement yesterday that the station has redesigned its programme line-ups to meet the yearnings and expectations of its numerous viewers.

    The statement reads: “While the station is poised to retain its audience across the country, Mrs. Moore explained that LTV 8 is also determined to expand its scope to drive more viewership to the station through quality and interesting programmes.

    “The programmes that would be launched by the TV station according to the general manager include: Agba Osugbo, Fruit of Eden and My Big Naija Wedding.

    “Others are Ewe Iwoyi, Secret File and The Story of Us, Eve, 4A 4B, End Star, Different Life, Two of A Kind and Back in The Day.”

  • ‘Guardian of the Galaxy’ returns to cinema

    A sequel to the popular ‘Guardian of the Galaxy’ which ruled the box office in 2014, like its prequel, is making waves across cinemas in Nigeria.

    Distributed in Nigeria by Blue Pictures, the movie which had its media screening on May 4, 2017 at the Silverbird Cinema, Ikeja, Lagos, continues the team’s adventures as they traverse the outer reaches of the cosmos. The Guardians must fight to keep their newfound family together as they unravel the mysteries of Peter Quill’s true parentage. Old foes become new allies and fan-favourite characters from the classic comics will come to our heroes’ aid as the Marvel cinematic universe continues to expand.

    Produced by Marvel Studios and distributed by Walt Disney Studios Motion Pictures, the film is written and directed by James Gunn and stars Chris Pratt, Zoe Saldana, Dave Bautista, Vin Diesel, Bradley Cooper, Michael Rooker, Karen Gillan, Pom Klementieff, Elizabeth Debicki, Chris Sullivan, Sean Gunn, Sylvester Stallone and Kurt Russell.

    CEO of Blue Pictures, Joy Odiette, described the new movie as evidently excited. “I am excited about distributing this blockbuster movie. Guardian of the Galaxy was a major box office hit across the world in 2014 and Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2 will surpass that success. It is a movie for everyone; it combines action with sci-fi and comedy and this makes it really entertaining and appealing to everybody. It’s now showing in all cinemas around, and I encourage everyone to go see it. I promise it will be worth it.” she said.

  • ‘Slow Country’ goes to cinema

    ‘Slow Country’ goes to cinema

    After winning the Audience Choice Award at the 2016 Africa International Film Festival, and fetching Sambasa Nzeribe his second consecutive Africa Magic Viewers’ Choice Award in the Best Actor in a Drama category, expectation for this film, before its official release, appears to have grown naturally.

    As the producers announced the debut of the film in cinemas across the country last Friday, the buzz continues on social media, of the much talked-about action movie coming to town.

    Produced and directed by the award-winning filmmaker, Eric Aghimien, ‘Slow Country’, which has been adjudged the most believable action movie ever made in Nollywood, highlights the issues of human and drug trafficking.

    Set in Nigeria, the movie follows the story of Kome, a homeless teenage mother, who in a bid to cater and secure a good life for her son, Peter, seeks refuge in the arms of a drug kingpin, Tuvi. The kingpin ushers her into the world of prostitution and drug trafficking. However, when faced with a serious dilemma and the sudden return of her ex-boyfriend, Osas, who desperately wants to win her heart, having abandoned her for seven years, she gets fed up and attempts to break free. She pleads with her boss to let her quit the underworld but he is not ready to let go of his most trusted cash cow.

    “Crafting a great action film in Nigeria is no child’s play,” said Aghimien while talking about the movie.

    “Every character in the movie was carefully built and each of the cast members portrayed their characters well. We paid attention to details every step of the way; in performance, in choreography, in visual effect, in special effect, everything. This movie is a must watch for all and I promise it will not only be worth their time but also their money.”

    ‘Slow Country’ stars Ivie Okujaiye-Egboh who played the role of Kome, Samasa Nzeribe who played Tuvi, the drug kingpin, Tope Tedela as Osas, and Majid Michel as Inspector Dave. Others are Richard Brutus as Brasko, Gina Castel as Ola, Adebayo Thomas as Peter, Victor Eriabie, Imoudu ‘DJ Moe’ Ayonete, and Shola Thompson-Adewale.

     

  • ‘Alakada’ Reloaded is next in Cinema

    ‘Alakada’ Reloaded is next in Cinema

    The much awaited star-studded comedy movie, ‘Alakada Reloaded’, is set to make its nationwide cinema debut on May 26.

    Produced by Toyin Abraham, who also acted in the film, ‘Alakada Reloaded’ also stars Ali Baba, Kehinde Bankole and Odunlade Adekola.

    Other cast members of the movie are Woli Arole, Nedu OAP, Helen Paul, Lilian Esoro, Annie Idibia, Bidemi Kosoko, Liz Da Silva, Lala Akindoju, Mr Latin, Iyabo Ojo and Gabriel Afolayan.

    The third in the series, the film follows the story of Yetunde Animashaun, a young girl from a poor family background who, as a result of her inferiority complex, engages in the act of making up stories and lying about her financial and social status in order to fit in with the crowd.

    “Although ‘Alakada Reloaded’, like the previous productions in the series follows the story of Yetunde Animashan, this movie takes a different dimension from the others,” said Abraham.

    “Alakada Reloaded is not just extremely hilarious and entertaining; it cuts across all spheres of our lives and realities. From medical, personality, morals, family, social, political, economical to religious views and more,” she added.

  • Kunle Afolayan flaunts home cinema

    Kunle Afolayan flaunts home cinema

    For a movie buff, what’s more special than having your own cinema? Ace actor and filmmaker Kunle Afolayan has done just that. In an Instagram post, Afolayan showed a picture of his mini-cinema which he built in his house.

    “Out of my passion for cinema and motion pictures, I created a cinema in my house,” wrote Afolayan whose latest production is The CEO while his other production includes Irapada, Phone Swap, Figurine  and October 1.

    “You are all welcome to private screenings.”

    According to the filmmaker, the cinema, which can seat 11 people, is a digital projection cinema with 7.1 surround sound.

    Also recently, Afolayan published on Youtube an extract from a documentary he shot in Rio, Brazil, which according to him ‘shows the value and richness of Yoruba culture and beliefs. In it, he interviews Gisele Omidarewa Cossard, an Iya Orisa, who talks to Afolayan on the various spaces in the shrine and how the practitioners conduct their ceremonies.

  • Producers relish Fifty’s cinema run

    As Nollywood movie, Fifty, from the stable of EbonyLife Films, wraps up its four months cinema run, producers of the flick have expressed satisfaction at its reception.

    In partnership with Film One Distribution, the movie grossed about 100m through Box Office takings alone, according to statistics from the producers.

    Speaking on Fifty’s cinema run, Executive Producer, Mo Abudu said; “we started our cinema run in early December 2015 and four months later the film continues to resonate with moviegoers across the country. We are extremely proud and it is testament that Nigerians do support their own”.

    According to Abudu, the movie’s revenue intake leverages on a unique business model not previously explored in the Nigerian Film Industry, a model which serves as proof to various stakeholders.

    Fifty, she said, enjoyed tremendous support from the Lagos State Government, the Federal Government, Corporate and Social Nigeria and industry captains.

    Adubu further that the success of Fifty has spawned a television series as the TV show will continue the premise that the movie set up; a week in the lives of four African Women approaching the golden age of ‘Fifty’.

    She also revealed that EbonyLife Films will release its second feature film, The Wedding Party in December.