Archive for the ‘yoruba movies’ Category

Nollywood opens a new window on Africa in Canada

Monday, March 1st, 2010

At Conie’s African Market in Burnaby, two customers watch Ahonhom Bone, a movie in the Akan language of northern Ghana. The viewers utter a collective sigh as African scenery is blacked out by the rolling credits. Although they may feel pangs for African landscapes, the store owner, Comfort Sam, notes that her movie customers are from all over Africa and the Caribbean, and are sometimes people who have family members of African descent.

“All of them are our favourites,” Sam says about the Nollywood movies in her store. “They remind us of home. Here, we are homesick.”

Nollywood is Nigeria’s multimillion-dollar movie industry, which produces more than 1,000 titles a year. It’s the world’s third-biggest, after Hollywood and Bollywood. Nollywood movies—offering fictional representations of Africans in their homelands with dialogue in African languages, English, or French—are shot straight to DVD and distributed internationally. They’re made on a tight deadline, two weeks or so of shooting, and an even tighter budget, up to a few thousand dollars. They’re often poorly shot, using digital cameras, and badly edited, with substandard sound quality, but these are Africans “telling our own stories our own way”, as director Bond Emeruwa says in the 2007 documentary This Is Nollywood.

Nollywood exploded into being with the 1992 production of Living in Bondage by director Chris Obi Rapu. But this was not the first movie made in Nigeria. The Nigerian film industry had existed since the ’60s but had not made much headway due to the high expense of production. In 1992, businessman Kenneth Nnebue needed to get rid of several thousand blank VHS tapes when the opportunity to make a movie became available. Living in Bondage was dubbed in widely spoken pidgin English and made cheaply available.

Conflict in Nollywood

Sunday, January 3rd, 2010

Ike becomes factional president of AGN
The movie body known as the Actors Guild of Nigeria (AGN) has been a field of battle among its members over who becomes the president or not. Some time this year, an election was conducted,

which produced Segun Arinze as the factional president of the body. Kanayo O. Kanayo and his faction disagreed with the emergence of Arinze as the president and he declared himself as the president. In the middle of this ongoing battle, another election was conducted producing Emeka Ike as the AGN president to the discontent of the likes of Arinze. Embattled Arinze attempted to halt the caretaker committee of the guild from conducting the election that produced actor Ike. Arinze, last month, was appointed to head the alleged Government of National Unity set up by the Ifeanyi Dike-led Board of Trustees of the guild, with Ike as his deputy as a way of moving the troubled guild forward. Arinze allegedly stormed the guild’s secretariat with a team of policemen from Area D, Mushin, with the intention of stopping the election. However, he failed as the Kanayo team, armed with a court order, refused to be intimidated.

Access Nollywood – Quick Facts

Monday, October 26th, 2009

Some Simple Facts About Nollywood

Nollywood is the 3rd largest film industry in the world behind Hollywood and Bollywood

Nollywood films are made on shoe string budgets with an average movie only taking around 10 day to complete with a cost of just $15,000

In only 30 years Nollywood has gone from zero to bring a $250 million dollar a year business.

Nollywood produces more movies yearly than Hollywood and Bollywood

Yoruba Movies are very popular in the home video arena.

There are around 300+ producers who churn out movies at an astonishing rate.

30+ new titles are released in Nigerian shops and markets every week where an normal film will sell about 50,000 copies.

Movies revolve round issues of romance, comedy, the occult, dodgy cops, prostitution and HIV/AIDS/

Nigerian stars are well known in Ghana, Zambia and beyond.

Star actors sometimes work on several movies at the same time.

Yoruba Movies are popular and growing in popularity in Europe and America.

Directors driving force behind Yoruba Movies And Nollywood

Monday, October 26th, 2009

Nollywood, Nigeria’s movie industry has gained the status of being one of the biggest on the planet and has been gathering huge plaudits worldwide. Although it can improve like anything the industry has grown immensely and has seen great success. This can be attribute to a number of factors but one of the main drivers of the industry remains the directors who remain behind the scenes.

Whilst filming on on location the directors of Nollywood, Yoruba Movies works harder than any other members found in the production crew, including the actors and actresses. Most of the time they spend on the artistic parts of their creation working with the actors to get the character down to perfection. Yoruba movies contain some colourful character which can be identified by the viewers for their fulfilment.