Tag: filmmaker

  • Filmmaker ‘defeats’ Omar al-Bashir at DIFF

    IT was another case of Film in Exile, but the effort became rewarding, as another feather was added to the cap of Sudanese filmmaker, Hajooj Kuka, whose documentary film, Beats of the Antonov, depicts al-Bashir not just as the kind of leader who drops bombs on unarmed civilians, but also as a racist, dividing his country along racial and ethnic lines.

    The dreadlocked artiste has been winning awards for the expository film, the recent, being at the just concluded Durban International Film Festival (DIFF), where he picked the Artwatch Africa laurel.

    Kuka made a show of the vicious treatment the citizens are facing in the hands of the country’s leader to the amazement of many at DIFF, who were not familiar with the real story of the present Sudan.

    The showcase at DIFF, occurred barely a month after President Omar al-Bashir escaped detention in South Africa, following International Criminal Court (ICC)’s order.

    However, Kuka’s documentary says it all, giving a human face to al-Bashir’s victims at the last Durban film fest and earning nods from viewers and judges at the festival. Thus, at the Award Night ceremony on July 25, Arterial Network’s Artwatch Africa Award was presented to Beats of the Antonov. The Award which was accompanied by a R15, 000 cash prize (equivalent of N234, 230) honours an African film that meaningfully engages with issues of Freedom of Expression.

    Here is how the Artwatch Africa Jury describes the work of the Sudanese filmmaker: “War has brutally divided the peoples of Sudan. This compelling film shows how the power of music, dancing and culture sustains the displaced people living in the remote war-ravaged areas of Southern Sudan. In the face of bombs dropping from the Antonov aeroplanes above, their songs of liberation and militancy are a means of identity affirmation and mobilization. I want to dance, play, and have a normal life, they say, as they exert their claim to freedom and freedom of expression even under the harsh circumstances of war.”

    Interestingly, Arterial Network’s Artwatch Africa project promotes and defends artiste rights and freedom of creative expression. Therefore, Kuku’s award celebrates the transformative and conscientising power of cinema. The same way that works like The Dead Sea by Hindi filmmaker, Leena Manimekelai; Taxi by Iranian filmmaker, Jafar Panahi; Timbuktu by Malian filmmaker, Abderrahmane Sissako and Fuelling Poverty by Nigerian filmmaker, Ishaya Bako found expressions at foreign film festivals.

    As one of the most uplifting films at this year’s DIFF, the Jury acknowledged Kuka’s remarkable two-year commitment in providing witness to the spirited resilience of local communities and ethnic cultures whose rights have been denied within the country of their birth through Beats of the Antonov.

    The documentary tells the story of the people of the Blue Nile and Nuba Mountains in Sudan who fought with the South for independence but have remained trapped in a civil war in the North.

    The Antonov in the title refers to the planes that drop bombs on the civilian population there. And as Nuba Reports journalists wrote in The Daily Maverick just after al-Bashir’s escape, “As South Africa dissects the implications of President Omar al-Bashir’s visit and his illegal departure, it’s worth remembering that although the International Criminal Court wants him for crimes committed years ago, the Sudanese president is still in power  and he’s still dropping cluster bombs on civilians.”

    The documentary depicts al-Bashir as waging war “against all the African elements in Sudan.” As CityPress wrote in their review, al-Bashir’s “quest for a purely Arab state leaves the other 156 cultural African groups unaccounted for. Bashir calls these people ‘black sacks’ and vows to wipe them out.”

    Beats of the Antonov has charmed audiences around the world, even winning The People’s Choice Documentary Award at The Toronto International Film Festival and four other international awards.

    Kuka directed and shot the documentary over two years, at immense personal risk. He also produced alongside South African Steven Markovitz, as a co-production between Sudanese production company Refugee Club and South African company Big World Cinema. South African Khalid Shamis edited the documentary with kuka in Cape Town.

    His DIFF award is another defeat on his President, Omar al-Bashir.

  • Nollywood filmmaker  Chika Onu gets PhD

    Nollywood filmmaker Chika Onu gets PhD

    Nollywood filmmaker, Christian Chika Onu, has received his PhD in Film Studies at the 2015 convocation ceremony of the University of Port Harcourt, Rivers State.

    Dr. Christian Chika Onu also studied filmmaking at the highly esteemed Colorado Film School in Denver, United States.

    Described as an outstanding achiever with numerous awards since he won the first prize in the J. F. Kennedy International Essay Competition in 1973, Onu was the President of the Oak Theatre during his undergraduate years at the University of Nigeria, Nsukka (UNN). He was also the Associate Editor of The Muse Departmental Magazine.

    In 1979, he won the British Council Award for the Best Creative Writer (University Press); Prime Director Award by Video/Film marketers in 2002; Member, Movie Makers Hall of Fame, Abuja in 2006; Pioneer Director Award Best of the Best (BOBTV) Expo, Abuja in 2008 and many other accolades of which the most recent are the 2014 TV and Film Achievement Award by Los Angeles Nollywood Film Association (LANFA) in August and Life Time Achievement Award in Cinema by Nollywood Africa Film Critics Awards (NAFCA), Los Angeles in September, 2014.

    He is the director of famous Nollywood movies, Living in Bondage 2, Glamour Girls, Peacemaker and other popular movies for which he has won many awards in Nigeria and America. He is the co-author of Nak-ed Beauty, said to be the first Nigerian screenplay to be published and sold as book.

  • Sudanese filmmaker takes Omar al-Bashir’s case to Durban

    Sudanese filmmaker takes Omar al-Bashir’s case to Durban

    Sudan’s current president, Omar al-Bashir may have escaped detention in South Africa, last month following International Criminal Court (ICC)’s order. But his countryman and filmmaker, Hajooj Kuka is making a show of the vicious treatment the citizens are facing in the hands of the country’s leader in Durban, South Africa, this month.

    Kuka’s documentary, Beats of The Antonov tells it all, giving a human face to al-Bashir’s victims at the Durban International Film Festival (DIFF), holding from July 16 to 26.

    Described by the organisers as one of the most uplifting films at this year’s DIFF, Beats of The Antonov is also an indictment of President Omar al-Bashir.

    The documentary tells the story of the people of the Blue Nile and Nuba Mountains in Sudan, who fought with the South for independence but now remain trapped in a civil war in the North.

    The Antonov in the title refers to the planes that drop bombs on the civilian population there. As Nuba Reports wrote in The Daily Maverick just after al-Bashir’s escape, “As South Africa dissects the implications of President Omar al-Bashir’s visit, and his illegal departure, it’s worth remembering that although the International Criminal Court wants him for crimes committed years ago, the Sudanese president is still in power – and he’s still dropping cluster bombs on civilians.”

    The documentary depicts al-Bashir not just as the kind of leader who drops bombs on unarmed civilians, but also as a racist, dividing his country along racial and ethnic lines, waging war “against all the African elements in Sudan.” As CityPress wrote in their review, al-Bashir’s “quest for a purely Arab state leaves the other 156 cultural African groups unaccounted for. Bashir calls these people ‘black sacks’ and vows to wipe them out.”

    According to The Mail and Guardian, the ANC described the decision to aid al-Bashir’s escape as “choosing African unity over the law.” But after watching the film, you’ll be left asking whether a stand for African unity shouldn’t rather be a stand with the people of the Blue Nile and Nuba Mountains, not with those trying to Arabicize them. The documentary is not anti-Islamic; it just argues that you can be Muslim without needing to be culturally Arabic, that you can embrace being an African Muslim rather than forcing everyone to be an Arabic one.

    As refugee Insaf Rawad says in the film, “Culture protects us. If people don’t release their pain, they will become miserable, without these parties to lift their spirits. When people are anxious and disturbed, dancing helps them get over it.”

    Similarly, ethnomusicologist Sarah Mohamed says, “Truly there is an alternative Sudan, other than the fake one presented to us in the capital Khartoum. There is a happy smiling Sudan that loves life.”

    Beats of the Antonov has charmed audiences around the world, even winning The People’s Choice Documentary Award at The Toronto International Film Festival and four other international awards.

    Kuka directed and shot the documentary over two years, at immense personal risk. He also produced alongside South African Steven Markovitz, as a co-production between Sudanese production company Refugee Club and South African company Big World Cinema. South African Khalid Shamis edited the documentary with kuka in Cape Town.

    “I urge all South Africans to see this film,” says Steven. “This film turns the notion of Africa as a continent of victims on its head and shows the incredible resilience of Sudanese people at a time of great adversity. They deserve our support ’’

    Kuka will be attending the festival, where Beats of the Antonov is in competition. The documentary premieres on Saturday, 18 July at 6pm at Suncoast.

  • Inferno and the filmmaker

    Inferno and the filmmaker

    What a grisly birthday present! In August this year, Ola Balogun, the notable Nigerian filmmaker, visual artist, dramatist and culture impresario, will turn seventy. Penultimate Thursday, Ola Balogun lost everything he has acquired in life to a terrible inferno which consumed everything in sight until it was put down.

    I use the phrase “put down” and not “put out” advisedly. In our part of the world, wild fires are like mad dogs. Everybody runs away from them if they have the chance. They range and roam with volcanic gusto until a combination rudimentary technology and sheer primitive prowess knock them out. Then everybody goes home to await the next mad dog.

    Such is the fate of societies trapped between the ancient order and modernity. Modernity will bring the consumer goods and all the trappings of occidental and oriental civilizations. But you cannot rent fire-fighting equipments and fire-fighters from America. In the absence of these, all the emblems and totems of civilization, all the gadgets acquired from other people’s technological labours, are mere ephemeralities awaiting the ultimate consumer. It is known as uninsurable goods and goodies.

    There are periods in a nation’s life when the personal tragedy is indistinguishable from the public tragedy, when indeed the private tragedy of the exceptional individual is a profound metaphor for the collective tragedy of human existence in the society. Take another look at the picture of the bewildered and stoically bemused filmmaker of impeccable upper class breeding amidst the rubble and horrific carnage of what used to be his adored home and you may well be looking at the last snapshot of the old Nigerian middle class or what the French call the “haute culture”.

    In its classical epoch before the barbarians overwhelmed the barricades, Ola Balogun’s father, an  Aba-based Yoruba lawyer, was part of it all, rubbing shoulders with the likes of Zik, Francis Akanu Ibiam, Eyo Ita, the Adeniyi-Jones and many other members of the emergent illuminati that birthed around the Enugu-Aba-Port Harcourt and Calabar axis. Just as the middle ground has disappeared from Nigerian politics, the middle class, the cultural, spiritual, political and economic backbone of any civilized society, has also vanished from the Nigerian horizon.

    It is perhaps profoundly symptomatic of this loss that the values of Calvinist thrift, restraint, delayed gratification, liberality and tolerance with which the European and American bourgeois classes powered modernity and rapid development in its classical epoch have also disappeared from Nigeria. The old African jungle with its commodious capacity for the re-absorption of the absconding has reclaimed its own.

    It is a tragedy that has been long in coming.   Rues Ola Balogun: “Everything is gone now-my books, films and other belongings. Although I still have some of my books in Paris, France. I have not lived in Paris for many years now. My family is over there. Meanwhile, this is a rented accommodation, which I have occupied for more than 10 years now”.

    Ask yourself what an internationally acclaimed filmmaker was doing in rented quarters and you are beginning to fumble with the firmly shut lid of a national scandal. How many retired professors can boast of having their own houses? As to the cause of the fire, Balogun was even more ironically revealing of the state of the nation and the collapse of its old middle class: “I can’t say I saw the start of the fire. There was no light before I slept and I put on my generator. Suddenly, I noticed that my generator went off by itself at about 1.30 am, but I didn’t come out for security reasons”.

    This is the image of a global citizen stranded by patriotic choice, a gifted and sensitive soul marooned; a cosmopolitan intellectual trapped in the punishing hell of a retarded post-colonial state. In the darkest moment of tormenting private loss, of strenuous intellectual and creative labour summarily eviscerated, Balogun must have wondered what made him stick to his beloved fatherland in spite of the ominous signals of distress.

    But it was not always like this. In the not too distant past, there was another country. The mind rolls back to Ife at the turn of the seventies. Anybody associated with the old University of Ife at the turn of the seventies, particularly the ancient Faculty of Arts, must remember a tall stripling young man fabulously attired in native fabric of francophone pedigree and his enchantingly exotic wife.

    Impeccably mannered and impressively credentialed,  Ola Balogun had returned home after degrees from Dakar and Paris to contribute his own quota to the development of the fatherland. The great university at Ife was the place to be at that particular time. There was the aroma of human distinction and future greatness in the air. Mesmerising exotica abounded. Ola Balogun together with the likes of Ulli Beer, Professor Feuser, the Heywoods, the Euba couple was part of the charmed circle of learning and culture. There was also the recently departed Jeffrey S. Gruber who had studied Linguistics at MIT and was rumoured to be a protégé of the old MIT hell-raiser, Noam Chomsky. It was a magic mountain.

    Forty five years down the line, both mountain and magic had disappeared as if toppled by an erupting volcano. But no matter what the ruins of a great architecture must remain. A few months back, as Snooper was traipsing and trampling around the Ikeja supermarket hub like a footloose flaneur, the eyes suddenly fell on a gentleman of unmistakable distinction quietly sipping his afternoon tea while browsing through some newspapers in cheery solitude.

    It could have been a Parisean café in the glorious era of Jean-Paul Sartre and his companion, collaborator and confidante, Simone de Beauvoir. But this was a small cramped coffee shop on the upper stairs of Goddy’s Supermarket in Ikeja. Consumed by his own company, it seemed that the gentleman sipping his tea was bent on avoiding eye contact with everybody. But there was something about him and the aura of solitary politeness which increased one’s fascination. Then he made a slip by briefly looking up, or it may be that the intense gaze penetrated his chilly armour. It was Ola Balogun.

    “Dr Ola Balogun, I must presume”, Snooper opened with a famous gambit of colonial interlopers. He smiled back, the hesitant and polite smile of the wellborn and well bred before inviting yours sincerely to a vacant seat near him. We had barely finished exchanging pleasantries about the good old days when an animated discussion about the state of the nation ensued.

    Like all concerned patriots, the famed filmmaker was disturbed and distressed about the state of the nation and how things could have been allowed to degenerate to this level where everything seemed to have gone to the dogs. He was quietly vehement but soft spoken. He did not seek to impress or to castigate unwholesomely. There was something about him which reminded one of the Etonian charms and diffidence of the old public school boy. From his travels, he has acquired the cosmopolitan savvy of the global denizen. But he also communicated a calm fortitude and stoic endurance.

    What particularly irked and riled Balogun was the virtual collapse of the middle class culture which supported and valorised the creative industry and artistic production in the country. The half a million readers that bought Gbolabo Ogunsanwo’s Sunday Times in the mid-seventies have all vanished into thin air. Even the down market Onitsha market literature has disappeared. In contemporary Onitsha market, you can see sweaty musclemen physically lugging expired freezers and other monstrous looking contraptions. It is not a scene for effete literati.

    But what was clear that afternoon was that despite the parlous state of the nation, the likes of Ola Balogun refused to be fazed or daunted. He kept coming up with schemes to revive the reading culture and the revival of an active intellectual class which will spearhead and pioneer the rebirth of the nation. He had many names ready and already penciled down. His quiet enthusiasm was to say the least quite infectious.

    If he is not persuaded to leave the country as a result of traumatic loss, Balogun may yet live to witness that glorious dawn of a renascent Nigeria and its resurgent middle class. But it is going to be a lot of hard work and imaginative thinking. As they say in American boxing parlance, the Nigerian middle class has taken a bad beat.

    The middle class is the most vital and vibrant stratum of any society. It is a historical truism and not a curse that any society that tries to wipe out its middle class will know neither peace nor stability. This is because it has removed the buffer that prevents the filthy rich from coming to direct collision with the filthy poor. Those who will redeem Nigeria have their work cut out for them. For now, there is going to be a helluva hollerin and hammerin in the land. May the notable filmmaker find the strength and fortitude to bear his huge loss.

  • Banned Singaporean filmmaker takes world premiere to Toronto

    Banned Singaporean filmmaker takes world premiere to Toronto

    Provocative Singaporean filmmaker Ken Kwek, whose last film project was banned in his homeland, staged a world premiere of his first feature film, Unlucky Plaza, at the opening of the prestigious Toronto International Film Festival (TIFF), yesterday.

    Unlucky Plaza is a black comedy about a down-on-his-luck Filipino immigrant who takes a group of prominent Singaporeans hostage in an upscale home after being scammed by a mysterious femme fatale.

    The crime caper is Kwek’s follow-up to his acclaimed but controversial 2013 satirical anthology Sex. Violence. Family Values. The collection was featured at several international film festivals, but was banned by Singapore’s Board of Film Censors and by the Malaysian government.

    However, public outrage, along with worldwide news attention forced Singapore’s censors to reverse their decision, but only after compelling the filmmaker to edit parts of the film.

    Unlucky Plaza stars acclaimed Filipino actor Epy Quizon (Pinoy Sunday), Singapore’s Adrian Pang (The Blue Mansion) and stage and TV actress Judee Tan, here making her feature film debut. The film was written and directed by Kwek, who also served as a producer along with Leon Tong and Kat Goh.

    “After the ban on Sex.Violence.FamilyValues, I’m naturally diffident about the film being passed – or passed clean – by Singapore’s censors,” Kwek said, adding that, “There’s every chance the film will not be screened in my own country, which makes the screenings in Toronto even more special and encouraging. TIFF has gifted to me a sense of freedom as an artiste that I don’t enjoy back home.”

    Unlucky Plaza premiered at Scotiabank Theatre 13, and although no entry from Nigeria at the festival this year, additional screenings have been scheduled as part of the festival’s “Discovery” programme, which spotlights new and upcoming directors in world cinema. The film, along with 38 others will compete for The Discovery Award, chosen by members of the International Federation of Film Critics.

  • UK-based Nigerian  filmmaker honoured  for Jand Hustle

    UK-based Nigerian filmmaker honoured for Jand Hustle

    EHIZOJIE Ojesebholo, United Kingdom-based Nigerian filmmaker and producer of Jand Hustle, recently won the Efere Ozako Best Experimental Film at the 10th edition of the Abuja International Film Festival (AIFF 2013).

    Jand Hustle is a documentary-comedy about a Nigerian called Jimmy Bendel, who travelled from West Africa to East London in search of greener pastures but finds out things are not the same as he had read about or heard from people who had travelled abroad.

    Artistes that featured in the movie include Rachael Oniga, Kevin Hallett, Onoh Kallista, Oyinka Yusuff, and Okechukwu Chima. It was co-produced by Funmi Adesanya (UK), Ibironke Ojesebholo (Nigeria) while Associate Producers include Vitor Okhai, Cheah Kar Mun, Yejide Akomolafe and Oliver Aleogena.

    Ojesebholo holds a Diploma certificate from Sound and Audio Engineering, (SAE), London and a Degree in Filmmaking from Middlesex University, London and he is a member of Directors Guild of Great Britain.