Tag: Nollywood

  • Nollywood  celebrity ‘steals’ IPhones

    Nollywood celebrity ‘steals’ IPhones

    Operatives attached to Area F Police Command, Lagos, yesterday arrested Nollywood celebrity, Seun Egbegbe for allegedly stealing seven IPhones at Computer Village.
    Egbegbe, an ex-lover of Yoruba movie star, Toyin Aimakhu was whisked away from a mob that attacked him after an alarm was raised from Keelcech Innovation Store, where he allegedly committed the offence.
    It was gathered that Egbegbe, who went to the market in a Sport Utility Vehicle (SUV), was moving towards his vehicle with IPhones when the shop owner screamed for help.
    He was said to have taken two Iphone7 and seven IPhone6 plus, totaling nine.
    However, Egbegbe at the station denied the theft allegation, insisting that he only went to his vehicle to get the balance payment based on his agreement with the sales boy.
    Police spokesperson Dolapo Badmos, a Superintendent (SP) said: “The command received the report. There are accusations and denials. The shop owner alleged that the said Seun came to his shop to buy phones, in the process he wanted to bolt away in a vehicle, while Seun said he wanted to pick money from his vehicle to balance the payment based on agreement with the sales boy but as he entered the vehicle the boy screamed for help and he was attacked by some people around the vicinity. “However the command through its operatives at Area F is investigating the matter to unravel the occurrence. The outcome would be made open.”

  • Nigeria can lead the world with Nollywood, says Peter Obi

    Nigeria can lead the world with Nollywood, says Peter Obi

    Former Anambra State Governor Peter Obi has described the Nigerian movie industry as a unifying factor that can help the country lead the world.

    Addressing the audience at the just-concluded Africa International Film Festival (AFRIFF), Obi said the impact of Nollywood is glaring and can be used as an example of what film can do to Africa, describing the industry as a phenomenal export from Nigeria.

    “I don’t think anything has impacted our contribution to Africa as much as Nollywood. It allows Nigerian actors to be able to tell our own stories, even our history. In today’s knowledge and creative economy all over the world, you can see our contribution.

    “Nollywood has added about $7.3 billion to our GDP. It has employed about one million Nigerians and it is the second largest employer of labour after agriculture. And I’m sure it will do more, looking at what is happening here today,” he said.

    According to Obi, the day we unite and bring diverse Nigerians together, we would lead the world.

    “You can see it tonight. There is no issue of tribalism and you only see this when there is creativity. It is based on talent and hard work. I am sure that with talents like this, we will build a better Nigeria. The young ones should take over,” Obi added.

    Also speaking, founder of AFRIFF, Chioma Ude, said the festival, in its sixth year, continues to be at the forefront of promoting African cinemas, and from this year’s programme, the evolution is a great.

    “In the last six years, we’ve covered three cities. We’ve had over 20,000 visitors of which 30 per cent were foreign. Each year, our open invitation to the world stakes on exhibiting the large diversity of ethnicities, culture and language.

    “Personally, for me, the thrust of the festival is the training it provides to young minds. We’ve trained over 1,300 of those minds in our workshops and we continue to emphasise that AFRIFF should, and must educate as much as it entertains. AFRIFF has created a space in which education and entertainment can cohesively co-exist, and I’m proud to say that we have brought several members of this AFRIFF family to develop the entertainment industry from the skills they acquired in their training,” she said.

    Ude also promised that AFRIFF will continue to influence both the young and the old, illustrating the significance of the African film industry as a grand profession in the continent.

    “And we will remind our global audience that we are here and as long as we live, we have a story to tell,” she concluded.

     

  • NOLLYWOOD DIVAS HONOUR MARY REMMY AT ROK TV LAUNCH

    WHEN it comes to supporting their own, Nollywood movie practitioners always have the back of each other. This was the case of Mary Remmy Njoku, who recently launched ROK TV channel on Sky UK.

    Travelling on the same plane to London for the event were Nollywood greats such as Mercy Aigbe-Gentry, Rukky sanda, Oge Okoye, Jackie Appiah, Ebube Nwagbo, Padita Agu, Mary Lazarus, Queen Nwokoye, Mama G, John Dumelo, Chioma Akpotha, Alex Ekubo and a host of others.

    Commending the actress who is also the wife of iRoko TV boss, for a job well done, Ekubo stated, “Dear Mary Remmy Njoku, I’m really proud of the woman you’ve become, coming from nothing to owning Rok TV on Sky London, is not an easy feat, a giant step not just for Nollywood but for Nigeria and Africa in General.

    “A win for one is a win for all, my goodness!!! What a time to be alive.”

    The new TV station will cover Nigerian entertainment and will be shown on Sky Network UK, Channel 344, according to Mary Remmy, who is currently in the United States.

    Mary Remmy, who has a diploma in Computer Science, started acting on-stage while in secondary school, after which she joined Nollywood at age 18.

  • NOLLYWOOD: DISPELLING OLD VS. NEW SENTIMENT (2)

    I received some calls after last week’s edition on the above subject, mostly from the younger Nollywood artistes, debunking perception that they started such campaign of calumny that appears to be dividing the industry along a demographic/year of entry line.

    “Young Nollywood is not attacking anyone. It’s the older people that started this divide and attacking and tearing down,” one of them said to me.

    “There’s no new or old Nollywood. It’s even more of the older people who started calling the younger ones new Nollywood,” said another.

    Your article sounds like we think we have arrived and are attacking; that’s not true o,” another one said. They said the latest onslaught started after an older colleague referred to OC Ukeje and Blossom Chukwujekwu as Instagram actors on air.

    Without sounding judgmental, I want to disagree that these two actors do not deserve that description. It seems that when we quarrel among ourselves in this manner, we are merely venting our anger on the sensations of a given time. Yet, we cannot stop the world from evolving, because, like I said in the previous piece, life is a journey of new discoveries.

    The Instagram vogue does not exclude anyone who is upwardly mobile. It is the kind of business strategy or marketing platform that drives a fan base, if you like. And it does not in any way define who these artistes are.

    Toronto International Film Festival (TIFF) did not see Ukeje merely as an Instagram actor to have invited him to lead a conversation at the last edition.

    In case the guy does not know OC Ukeje, here is how TIFF described him: “a Lagos-born actor, singer and performer. Winner of the 2006 Amstel Malta Box Office reality TV show for actors, he later trained at the New York Film Academy. He has won several Best Actor awards, including the Africa Magic Viewers’ Choice Award, a Nigeria Entertainment Award, an Africa Movie Academy Award, and a Best of Nollywood Award.”

    His films include Teco Benson’s Two Brides and a Baby (2011); Jeta Amata’s Black November (2012); Half of a Yellow Sun (2013), based on Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie’s bestselling novel; Destiny Ekaragha’s Gone too Far!(2013); Kenneth Gyang’s Confusion Na Wa (2013); Seyi Babatope’s When Love Happens (2014); the television series Gidi Up; Remi Vaughan-Richards’ The Department (2015); Sara Blecher’s Ayanda (2015); and Niyi Akinmolayan’s The Arbitration (2016), which plays at the Festival.

    For Chukwujekwu who made his professional acting debut in 2009 and won the Best Supporting Actor Award at last year’s edition of Africa Magic Viewers Choice Award, here is what Wikipedia has to say: “In 2009, after several auditions Chukwujekwu landed the lead role in the yet to be released Nigeria soap opera; Portrait Of Passion. That same year he was cast in his first feature film, Vivian Ejike’s Private Storm alongside Omotola Jalade Ekeinde and Ramsey Nouah.

    Blossom was profiled on Africa Magic’s Nollywood show, Jara, as one of the top 5 actors to watch out for in 2013. He was number 4 on ace Nollywood director, Charles Novia’s, list of the best actors of 2013. In 2012, Chukwujekwu landed a role in Flower Girl which was his breakout movie.

    Released in 2013, it achieved critical and commercial success in Nigeria, Ghana, the United Kingdom and film festivals in the USA and Canada. Chukwujekwu’s next block buster feature film, Finding Mercy, was one of the most anticipated and successful movies of 2013. It was the closing film at the African International Film Festival (AFRIFF 2013).

    In 2014 Knocking on Heaven’s Door opened in cinemas nationwide on April 18. Chukwujekwu’s performance as the abusive and emotionally volatile “Moses” earned him the Africa Magic Viewers’ Choice 2015 Best Supporting Actor award.

    He has featured in a handful of TV dramas & series, such as Tinsel on MNET, where he played Mr. Akinlolu Hart, MTVBASE’s HIV themed Shuga, CATWALQ by Emem Isong and Monalisa Chinda, Greg Odutayo’s My Mum and I, About to Wed and Married.

    Chukwujekwu plays the lead role of Kelechi Pepple in Nigeria’s first indigenous Telenovella; Taste of Love (2015).

    If you described the two actors profiled above as Instagram stars, that was a careless talk. And indeed, you don’t expect the younger filmmakers to sit back and not set the records straight by correcting wrong impressions.

    The fact that you are old school does not mean you should not be in vogue. Not when someone like my grandmother is on Facebook. People should make use of the tools available to them to rule every moment of their lives.

    I am a witness to how Tunde Kelani and Tade Ogidan have celebrated Kunle Afolayan. Those are elders who mean well for the industry and are not afraid of competition. Afterall, don’t we pray that our kids should surpass our achievements in Life?

    Respect is reciprocal. And this is not just for the guy who denigrated the above actors but for other older folks with similar mind. Call some other younger actors Instagram stars and you’d be fine, but not OC Ukeje and Blossom Chukwujekwu.

  • WHY JAMAICANS LOVE NOLLYWOOD MOVIES–COMEDIAN AYO MAKUN

    WHY JAMAICANS LOVE NOLLYWOOD MOVIES–COMEDIAN AYO MAKUN

    From doing standup comedy and shooting skits, comedian Ayo Makun, popularly known as AY, took the Nigerian movie industry by storm with his record breaking debut production, ‘30 Days in Atlanta’. Now set for another cinema run, the comedian-turned-filmmaker says that he is set to achieve more feats. He speaks with OVWE MEDEME on the journey so far and other issues. 

    1447754236193WHAT is the concept behind A Trip to Jamaica?

    I did a little research and I discovered that Jamaicans love Nollywood movies. Many of them, even at work go out to buy our DVDs. Apart from that, we love their culture, so I thought there should be that blend.  Also, there was this collaboration between Busy Signal, a Jamaican artiste and Tiwa Savage which is the official theme song of the movie.

    From comedy to movies, where is your final destination?

    I love entertainment. I have a passion for it and that is why I studied Theatre Arts. I majored in directing. It’s just me doing my thing. The fact that money comes in is just a plus. The next destination will be doing more films, try as much as possible to continue to put my name on the world map and of course, to continue to learn on the job as well.

    What are your projections for the film, considering that your last movie made it to the Guinness Book of World Records?

    Before the Guinness World Record came, we were done with A Trip to Jamaica. Let me take you back to 30 days in Atlanta. This was me just setting out to go have fun. I’m known around here as a standup comedian with my programme, AY Live. I had a discussion with my wife about diversification, about doing something different and since I do a lot of skits that made my YouTube channel the most viewed in the country for three years back to back, she suggested I put them together to make a full movie. That was what gave birth to 30 Days in Atlanta.

    And because I was new in the business, the idea was just to put some budget together and go shoot a film. I didn’t know it was going to make a difference. And right now, I am basking in that euphoria. I enjoy and appreciate the fact that 30 days in Atlanta made it to the Guinness book of records. And I know the expectations are there right now. So let’s see what this film will bring my way.

    How did it make you feel?

    I felt good. I feel very happy. I didn’t see it coming, not even for a second. I mean, I always tell people, I used to go to the library back in the days to just grab that book and I have this impression that these people, they probably had four heads. I never knew a day would come when I would see myself in the book. Maybe, somebody is reading now and thinking AY too has four heads.

    These days, comedians are delving into movies. Is it that the comedy industry is no longer paying?

    It’s a very good thing. As a matter of fact, that is how it’s supposed to be. Because if you look at some of the people we look up to, you know that they are almost doing the same thing. Somebody like Bovi, I know he’s had that idea. It’s just that it’s coming at the right time. All over the world, comedians are now doing movies. It’s not just about doing standup comedy.

    What do you think you did differently to earn you a Guinness record?

    I just said that, I set out to go there and have fun. A lot of people are attributing it to something else. They are saying maybe I did Juju. I’ve heard all sorts and I’m beginning to suspect myself in the sense that in the series of the things that I do always come out well. My standup comedy show is one of the biggest in the country. Same with my TV show. I’m just a product of grace. That is what I tell people. Not because I am the best, not because I know how to do it better. I just have this shining light and I keep praying that the grace remains. For now, let me enjoy my grace.

    Your last movie was affected by activities of pirates. How do you intend to forestall that this time around?

    Piracy is worldwide but for Nigeria, it is very bad. Even before it gets to the cinemas, it is out there. Good enough, they allowed me enjoy my cinema run. It was very heartbreaking but then we have worked out modalities to curb their excesses. We cannot curb it completely because there is always somebody who will sell out. We have a security feature in place but it is not something I would like to make public. I would also like to beg the federal government to do something about it. I live in fear, knowing that I’m about to release my movie.

    In a nutshell, how would you describe A Trip to Jamaica?

    It’s a romantic comedy. It talks about love. And it was shot in Jamaica, Nigeria and Atlanta as well. It’s a movie starring the likes of Funke Akindele, Nse Ikpe-Etim, myself playing Akpos, Chris Attoh from Ghana, Eric Roberts from Hollywood and Paul Campbell from Jamaica. It promises to be fun. I’m just going to ask fans and lovers of comedy to go on out there and see A Trip to Jamaica.

    What inspired the story?

    You know, I create stories. I mean, there are some parts that have personal experiences, but then, it’s just something I came up with, knowing fully well that I want to shoot in Jamaica. I just thought of a need to do something that would blend with that background and would reflect Nigeria as well. So, that was what inspired it.

    From 30 days In Atlanta to A Trip to Jamaica. What will Akpos be up to next?

    Akpos is very adventurous. Akpos is not limited to a zone. That’s why you see in my movies, if I’m doing anything in the Akpos series, you’ll see him operating from his zone to another zone and also to go and reflect how a Warri boy would be seen or appreciated in that region. So, if you say you want to play the Akpos character and you just limit it within, it’s just going to be normal.

    So, from 30 Days in Atlanta, we decided to also make A Trip to Jamaica. Don’t be surprised, if I come back again to say, Akpos is going for a week in Paris because the truth is that people would want to know what he has gone to Paris to do again. It’s just a strategy, an idea, a concept and it’s helping the brand.

    Do you think A Trip to Jamaica would surpass 30 Days In Atlanta?

    Everybody who is in business will tell you ‘yes’. But let’s go beyond business. I believe strongly in A Trip to Jamaica and Nigerians would tell me the outcome.

    What sparks your creativity?

    First, it’s a determination to succeed. I have a family to take care of. And number two, I just love to make people happy. Anything I can do to make people laugh and happy, I embark on it.

    How much have you invested so far?

    So much! It’s just that we hardly discuss budgets. The last one we talked about, we remember the people who came to our office (laughs) to ask for what they did not put in the movie.

    Are we likely to have an Akpos series?

    The series is in discussion right now. That is for another day. We’re going to have the series pretty soon.

    What other creative side of you are we yet to see?

    Creative side of me? I’m all about entertainment. And I love to be an all-encompassing showbiz person. The only thing I know; I won’t venture into right now is singing. Because I know that I can’t sing to save my life. But e go get the way the matter go be, I go carry mic.

  • NOLLYWOOD YET TO SOUND WELL

    NOLLYWOOD YET TO SOUND WELL

    WITH the first-of-its-kind international platform given to Nollywood at the just concluded Toronto International Film Festival (TIFF) where eight Nigerian films were selected for the festival’s city-to-city programme, the Nigerian motion picture industry is fast redefining itself and it is just a matter of time before we hit the much anticipated mark.

    Apart from some shortcomings which were personal to each of the films, one deficiency that was identified with all the Nigerian films was in the area of sound. This has never been so aggregated, and I think that, knowing the resolute nature of the New Nollywood (which in my estimation is a mix of adventurous old and new folks), we would soon achieve clean sound, the same way we have managed to ‘match’ Hollywood in the area of cameras and other equipment.

    Knowing how much our noisy environ has contributed to this problem, the Nigerian government, developmental agencies and other investors who feel that Nigeria really needs to diversify from oil should begin to rethink their intervention by taking another look at the importance of a film village, for example, while ADR (Automatic Dialogue Replacement) option, a process of re-recording dialogue in the studio in sync with the motion picture, still suffices.

    Apart from fund and the extra time needed for this ADR, I am tempted to think that the actor, who may be in a hurry to enter the next production set, could be the challenge for this option.

    I had listened to an ADR dubbing of Clem Ohameze’s voice (whose case may not be that of hurrying into another set) in a recent production. And as much as the voice sounded the same, it was a husky contrast to the other lines, making a joke of the film in the end.

    We have ignored this aspect of our ‘technical life’ for too long, refusing to be cautioned from home, until strangers spit it to our face like a refrain to different songs.

    Wonder why a Nigerian film had not won the Sound category of the AMAAs until last year being the 11thedition? It is because we took that area for granted. Whatever was the motivation for the producers of ‘Fifty’ to have created a sound department, comprising three experts; Meltem Baytok, Foley artist, Simon Price, Supervising sound editor and Nick Roberts, ADR mixer, was commendable and deserving of that award.

  • KENYA’S SINGLE ENTRY EDGES NOLLYWOOD OUT

    KENYA’S SINGLE ENTRY EDGES NOLLYWOOD OUT

    I was more concerned with films from Africa and the Middle East at this year’s TIFF for the purpose of proximity which is one of the parameters for newsworthiness. On the other hand, I know that the narrative is fast changing to our part of the world, and there is just the need to know those that Nigeria would be competing with within the same region, because whether we agree or not, the window to the outside world is the lens with which African stories are told.

    Therefore, even though none of the Nigerian films won in the competitive categories, our East African brothers from Kenya grabbed a laurel, a tougher one, if you ask me –  Prize of the International Federation of Film Critics (FIPRESCI), awarded to Mbithi Masya for the film, Kati Kati.

    Yes, the film, even though it is from a first time feature film director, got some foreign collaboration, which is one of the factors that make a film huge and disposed to other audiences. Beyond that, that a more critical audience like FIPRESCI found it worthy, makes this more pleasing to me.

    The jury remarked: “With a generous and poetic tone, not without a degree of anger at personal and political injustice, FIPRESCI is pleased to present the prize in the Discovery programme to an exciting and unique new voice in cinema, Mbithi Masya for his debut feature Kati Kati.”

    By implication, another African film is Oscar hopeful, knowing the chances that TIFF’s strong films have had at the Academy awards.

    Recall that the film, 12 Years a Slave, which fetched Kenyan girl, Lupita Nyong’o her first Oscar was first premiered at TIFF in 2013. Perhaps another Kenyan is about to get global attention again.

    Nigeria can take a cue and make the best of existing cultural agencies like Ford Foundation, British Council and Goethe Institut for such exports; I recall that Nigeria had a similar chance in 2013 with the 30 percent sponsorship of Biyi Bandele’s ‘Half of a Yellow Sun’ by British Film Institute (BFI), which couldn’t fly as expected, even with British-Nigerian actor, Chiwetel Ejiofor, playing the lead.

    Kati Kati’s director, Mbithi Masya, a member of Kenya’s acclaimed alternative house-funk trio, Just a Band, is just an unassuming filmmaker who has directed numerous short films, documentaries, commercials, music videos, and video installations, just like some of the directors of the Nollywood films selected for TIFF. Pundits believe that there is really no difference in the opportunities that Nollywood filmmakers are exposed to, just personal drive, simplicity, thoroughness and strategy.

    “I’m used to working on a small scale,” Masya says. “I think if they told me to write a big African epic … I would have been out of my depth.”

    The film opens with a shot of a woman standing in an empty field, unsure of how she got there. She soon discovers that she’s dead and now finds herself trapped at the mysterious wilderness lodge from which the movie takes its name.

    Shot entirely on location at a working safari lodge, the movie has an intimate scope that Masya says suits his first foray into feature films.

    Kati Kati was produced by One Fine Day Films and Kenyan production house Ginger Ink, with support from Germany’s Federal Ministry for Economic Cooperation and Development, the Goethe Foundation, Arri, and Deutsche Welle’s DW Akademie, a non-profit sponsoring media development.

  • BENIN CITY IS LIKE NEW HOLLYWOOD–NOLLYWOOD ACTOR EUGENE OBADAN

    From a young age, Eugene Obadan wanted to be in the movies. And now, with the release of Pandora, a movie of political intrigues, Obadan, a graduate of Business Administration from the Lead City University, Ibadan is living his dreams. In this interview with JOE AGBRO JR., the Edo State based actor, scriptwriter and movie producer talks about his ambition and other issues

    YOU studied Business Administration. How did you get into producing movies?

    Well, the first thing is, movies to me is a talent. I wrote the script, Pandora. The idea of Pandora came to me as a result of the current political and economic situation in the country, especially in terms of security. Movie is natural to me. I can sit down and create stories from my mind. I create different kinds of stories and I write them easily. All I need is an editor, that’s all. If I decide to imagine a story, give me five days, I would come up with a story. So, movies to me, is like a talent. I cannot just side-line it.

    When did you know that you had this talent?

    Well, it was when I was I think, 14 or thereabouts. I actually told my parents I wanted to be an actor but of course, you know the Nigerian factor. My mother wanted me to be a medical doctor, my father said I would be good in business. Actually, my father said I was better in business, so I studied business administration. But movies, acting and scriptwriting has always been a part of me.

    Is Pandora your first work?

    Yes, Pandora is my first major work. But actually, I have written other scripts which are still in the pipeline. But I decided to do Pandora because of the love for the story and the present situation in the country. Pandora is about emotional blackmail. It’s a presidential movie in the sense that we have a president who actually wanted to do good for his people. He wanted to be a good president but forces around him which he never knew like the vice-president in the movie, was his best friend but the vice-president wanted that seat and never liked his policies.

    The vice-president wanted the old factor that caused deprivation, poverty, and depression amongst the people. So, the movie tells us of how the vice president was able to use emotional blackmail, that is, like kidnapping the president’s daughter and destabilising the presidency in other to obtain power. So, it tells us another side of politics which people don’t really see. How politicians can actually use emotional blackmail, assassination and even all sorts of means to get power aside the normal elections. So Pandora shows us these intrigues and also the quest for power and what it leads to – embezzlement, greed and so on and so forth. (It is about) how people in government can actually manipulate the affairs of state for their interests in order to topple government.

    When you talk about mixing emotional blackmail with politics, that is like the power play that goes on in politics all over the world. When you were writing the movie, did you have any country in mind?

    Now, you’re asking me a very technical question. Well, definitely Nigeria has always been a case study for many things. So, if we’re talking about a country, I didn’t need to look too far for my research. You can see it all around.

    For someone doing this for the first time, how did it all go?

    Well, the whole thing taught me a big lesson. Number one, to respect Nigerian movie producers more because it’s not easy. Especially the ones that are really involved in the production. I’m not talking of the ones that pay the money and say, ‘Oya, go and do what you like.’ I’m talking of the one that follows the sequence. It is a very Herculean task. You cannot override the fact that you will meet a lot of people. First of all, my first challenge was, in Benin City, I gathered a group of people for props.

    Now, this same group, because I did not get a particular lens for the camera. We used a Black Magic camera. It’s a cinematography camera. It’s one of the best in the industry. But because I was still coming in the business, I did not get the batteries on time, so in the quest of looking for them, I missed a day. And these people connived and said they were no longer going to be a part of the production. I had paid them. They took my money and they said they were not going to be involved. In my frustration, I called a lot of people to prevail on them.

    Even the Nigerian Police prevailed on them, to please, ‘they should work with me.’ They refused, thinking that the project was going to be frustrated without their involvement. The shocking part was that I was even willing to sacrifice more into their funds and they refused. So, in that frustration and in that sort of pain, I had to speak with my director who now got in touch with some of his other colleagues from different parts – Port Harcourt, Lagos and environs, to come and help out. That means, making me pay extra. What I have paid before, I didn’t get it because I couldn’t be fighting those people while I had a project that needs to be done.

    I had to pay external people again before we now started the project. And to God be the glory, we started and we finished. And today, I’m  glad because many people told me, especially those people, they told me it would not work. But I’m glad that the picture was successful. We had stars like Alex Osifo, Segun Arinze – they did a perfect job. They were with me all through the time. Even Alex Osifo helped by involving one or two people – the political clout – to assist us in terms of getting a vehicle and all that. At the end of the day, it was a success. Since it was my company, Eugene Entertainment Network, funding it alone, it was very Herculean.

    You funding this project, how much did it cost you?

    It’s a lot of money my brother. We thank God. Before I did the project, I’ve been involved in other things. I’m also into real estate. There was no help from anywhere, I’ll be frank with you. The only help I got was thanks to one of my neighbour in the house. Instead of an hotel, we used my neighbour’s house because he just moved. We used his house as a place for the actors and actresses and set people for all of them to lodge. So, that helped in a long way. The airport in Benin assisted us, even though we paid, the assistance was more than the money. Thanks to UBTH Golf Course where we also used the Golf Club without collecting a dime.

    Nollywood is very competitive. How do you feel about putting your movie there?

    Well, I had this dream of being an actor, I had the dream of doing movies. And thank God it’s coming to pass. And I believe since I did not compete with anybody to do this movie, it was my own thing. So, I believe if your product is good, people would buy. I had a story and I believe it’s a beautiful story. To the memory of my father, he was the first person. He’s late now – Augustus Obadan. He was the one who actually encouraged me. He was the first person who edited this script. And he has always told me to go for it. Before he died, he asked several times when I was going to do it. Unfortunately, he’s not here. I know, his spirit being with us, it’s going to sail forth.

    You’re based in Benin. How would you describe the movie industry in Benin?

    Good enough, I once worked in Kada Plaza where we have the biggest cinema in Benin. When I was there, what I saw was what even encouraged me the more because there is this new culture on Sunday that everybody in Benin would love to go to the cinema with their family to go and watch a movie.

    And you can ask from Desmond Elliot, Lancelot Imasuen, Benin has become the new haven for movies. I don’t know whether it was my movie that sparked that up. I don’t know whether it was there before me. but what I witnessed during my production was like about four movie companies were actually doing movies in Benin, which I know was not happening before. I want to believe it was part of my bringing in Segun Arinze and Alex Osifo to Benin that has cranked up this new awareness to Benin City.

    I know Iyore was shot in Benin and movies like Invasion was shot in Benin. So, Benin is now like the new Hollywood in Nigeria. But in terms of distribution and sales, you cannot rule out the giant, which is Lagos. That’s why I’m in Lagos and I’ve been speaking with FilmOne Distribution. I hope they read this paper so that they would work with me to ensure that this film is properly distributed in the cinemas. Because, like I said, we used Black Magic and Black Magic is a cinematographic camera that they use to do cinema movies.

    Did you also act in the movie?

    Yes, I did. I played the role of Nicholas. Nicholas was the one who rescued the president’s daughter. He’s a character that would put everybody in suspense because first of all, you’ll want to know, where did this guy come from? He was part of the Black Disciple Organisation that kidnapped the president’s daughter and as a member, he understood them.

    How long did it take to produce the movie?

    Right now, it’s still under editing. I’d scripted this movie about three years ago. First of all, I had to get all the equipment, the camera, lights and everything because I discovered through my director that there is no way we can pay every day for these things if we have to do it well, because it would cause almost the same thing purchasing them. So, we had to take our time to buy some of the best equipment.

    So you actually bought those equipment?

    Yes, I have them. And I’m putting them up for rent. I’ll still be using them. Definitely, this is not going to be my only movie. My prayer is for sponsors, good Nigerians, and those who are giving loans and grants, to look into our case and into my movie.

    What is the next thing for you now?

    I have a lot in stock and I’m writing more. But first of all, we must see the success of this one. I must be properly encouraged and properly motivated to bring out more stories.

  • THE NOLLYWOOD-TIFF EXPERIENCE

    WHEN the TIFF City-to-City programme started in 2009, its inaugural choice, Tel Aviv, was met with criticism by a section of the country being spotlighted. They accused the festival organizers of being embroiled in Israeli propaganda because of the turmoil in the Middle East. In protest, a director, John Greyson had withdrawn his film, ‘Covered’ from the festival.

    Despite the political and economic situation in Nigeria, none of the eight films; ’76 by Izu Ojukwu; ’93 Days by Steve Gukas; ‘Green White Green’ by Abba Makama; ‘Just Not Married’ by Uduak-Obong Patrick;  ‘Okafor’s Law’ by Omoni Oboli and ‘Oko Ashewo’ (Taxi Driver) by Daniel Emeke Oriahi selected from Nigeria has political undertone, and thus Nollywood grabbed the opportunity with both hands.

    Even ’76, the riveting drama set against the backdrop of the attempted 1976 military coup against the then government of General Murtala Mohammed is subtle in its angle and had the full support of the Nigerian Army as attested by director Izu Ojukwu. Also, 93 Days by Steve Gukas also celebrates the conquest of Lagos and Nigeria over the Ebola virus, Abba Makama’s ‘Green White Green’, albeit an arty film, x-rays Nigeria to the world in shades and colours that are more celebratory than controversial. Other films play up the social aura with dint of comedy that makes for great entertainment.

  • 30 days in Atlanta makes Guinness world record

    30 days in Atlanta makes Guinness world record

    Ayo Makun (AY)’s 30 Days in Atlanta, a romantic comedy film has been identified by the Guinness World Record for its high domestic gross earnings.

    The romantic movie was recognised as of the films with the highest domestic gross earnings when compared with Hollywood’s Stars Wars and Bollywood’s PK.

    The movie, which featured top Nollywood actors like Desmond Elliot, Majid Michel, Ramsey Noah and produced by stand-up comedian, AY, recorded a gross N135million in Nigeria three months after its release.

    No doubt, this is a big success for the Nigerian film industry, Nollywwod, which currently posses as the largest in Africa.