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Nigeria’s Booming Film Industry Redefines African Life - New York Times - Entertainment (4) - Nairaland

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Re: Nigeria’s Booming Film Industry Redefines African Life - New York Times by InyinyaAgbaOku(m): 3:52pm On Apr 23, 2017
matamaros:

CHEST BEATERS ARE AT IT AGAIN. IS IT POSSIBLE FOR MOVIE PIRATORS TO HAVE FOUNDED NOLLYWOOD. FOR YOUR INFORMATION NOLLYWOOD STARTED IN YORUBAS L
AND. THE EARLIER IT ENTERS INSIDE YOUR EMPTY SKULL THE BETTER.

Obviously you don't know what an industry is or nollywood.
Those plays your people were doing before 1992 weren't home videos.
Even Things fall apart was done before 92 and it wasn't called nollywood and the likes of Pete Edochie that acted it didn't complain.

FYI, nollywood In 2012 celebrated 20 years in Nigeria and yoruba people respected themselves and came.
So, keep talking about plays.

An industry is made of marketers, distributors, actors, directors, producers, welfare, story, etc and you could watch at home.
Iweka road via Living in bondage started it

2 Likes

Re: Nigeria’s Booming Film Industry Redefines African Life - New York Times by donnie(m): 3:14am On Apr 29, 2017
Nigeria has a vibrant youth population with great potential...

Meanwhile the Loveworld Festival of Music and arts has kicked off in Johannesburg with much colour, fun excitement. And yes, new talents will be discovered.
See post here with amazing pictures.
https://www.nairaland.com/3768842/loveworld-festival-music-arts-kicks
Re: Nigeria’s Booming Film Industry Redefines African Life - New York Times by CAMNEWTON4PRES: 10:25am On May 14, 2017
Nigeria really makes us proud, thanks to Nigerians we can enjoy some African movies on Netflix . Also the movies are becoming more and more sophisticated while keeping their originality(Nigerian /African spirit), they are going away from the poverty ,shanties ,etc that is always Africa image in Hollywood and past nollywood movies ...and it is inspiring other African countries ... thanks to such revolution I can actually watch Africa middle class on tv , nice city,well built houses ,well dressed women and men ...nice cars etc

Thank you Nigerians.

3 Likes

Re: Nigeria’s Booming Film Industry Redefines African Life - New York Times by bigfrancis21: 5:14pm On May 15, 2017
CAMNEWTON4PRES:
Nigeria really makes us proud, thanks to Nigerians we can enjoy some African movies on Netflix . Also the movies are becoming more and more sophisticated while keeping their originality(Nigerian /African spirit), they are going away from the poverty ,shanties ,etc that is always Africa image in Hollywood and past nollywood movies ...and it is inspiring other African countries ... thanks to such revolution I can actually watch Africa middle class on tv , nice city,well built houses ,well dressed women and men ...nice cars etc

Thank you Nigerians.

Thanks for sharing this brother.
Re: Nigeria’s Booming Film Industry Redefines African Life - New York Times by Vagazut(m): 9:07pm On May 16, 2017
TippyTop:
It will continue booming as long as Dullardeen is not allowed near it.
Re: Nigeria’s Booming Film Industry Redefines African Life - New York Times by AkQWA: 5:13am On May 25, 2017
I love watching Nigerian movies. They should also venture into quality animated movies. With our great story lines, they should be a global hit.
Re: Nigeria’s Booming Film Industry Redefines African Life - New York Times by gomorodion(m): 6:56am On Jun 03, 2017
anonymous6:
ASABA, Nigeria — Sitting on a blue plastic stool in the sweltering heat, Ugezu J. Ugezu, one of Nigeria’s top filmmakers, was furiously rewriting his script as the cameras prepared to roll. “Cut!” he shouted after wrapping up a key scene, a confrontation between the two leading characters. Then, under his breath, he added, “Good as it gets.”

This was the seventh — and last — day of shooting in a village near here for “Beyond the Dance,” Mr. Ugezu’s story of an African prince’s choice of a bride, and the production had been conducted at a breakneck pace.

“In Nollywood, you don’t waste time,” he said. “It’s not the technical depth that has made our films so popular. It’s because of the story. We tell African stories.”

The stories told by Nigeria’s booming film industry, known as Nollywood, have emerged as a cultural phenomenon across Africa, the vanguard of the country’s growing influence across the continent in music, comedy, fashion and even religion.

Nigeria, Africa’s most populous nation, overtook its rival, South Africa, as the continent’s largest economy two years ago, thanks in part to the film industry’s explosive growth. Nollywood — a term I helped coin with a 2002 article when Nigeria’s movies were just starting to gain popularity outside the country — is an expression of boundless Nigerian entrepreneurialism and the nation’s self-perception as the natural leader of Africa, the one destined to speak on the continent’s behalf.

“The Nigerian movies are very, very popular in Tanzania, and, culturally, they’ve affected a lot of people,” said Songa wa Songa, a Tanzanian journalist. “A lot of people now speak with a Nigerian accent here very well thanks to Nollywood. Nigerians have succeeded through Nollywood to export who they are, their culture, their lifestyle, everything.”

Nollywood generates about 2,500 movies a year, making it the second-biggest producer after Bollywood in India, and its films have displaced American, Indian and Chinese ones on the televisions that are ubiquitous in bars, hair salons, airport lounges and homes across Africa.

The industry employs a million people — second only to farming — in Nigeria, pumping $600 million annually into the national economy, according to a 2014 report by the United States International Trade Commission. In 2002, it made 400 movies and $45 million.

Nollywood resonates across Africa with its stories of a precolonial past and of a present caught between village life and urban modernity. The movies explore the tensions between the individual and extended families, between the draw of urban life and the pull of the village, between Christianity and traditional beliefs. For countless people, in a place long shaped by outsiders, Nollywood is redefining the African experience.

“I doubt that a white person, a European or American, can appreciate Nollywood movies the way an African can,” said Katsuva Ngoloma, a linguist at the University of Lubumbashi in the Democratic Republic of Congo who has written about Nollywood’s significance. “But Africans — the rich, the poor, everyone — will see themselves in those movies in one way or another.”

In Yeoville, a neighborhood in Johannesburg that is a melting pot for migrants, a seamstress from Ghana took orders one recent morning for the latest fashions seen in Nollywood movies. Hairstylists from the Democratic Republic of Congo, Mozambique and Zimbabwe, working in salons or on the street, offered hair weaves following the styles favored by Nollywood actresses.

“Nigerian movies express how we live as Africans, what we experience in our everyday lives, things like witchcraft, things like fighting between mother-in-laws and daughter-in-laws,” said Patience Moyo, 34, a Zimbabwean hair-braider. “When you watch the movies, you feel it is really happening. One way or another, it will touch your life somewhere.”

When I first reported on Nigeria’s film industry more than a decade ago, the movies were slapped together in such a makeshift fashion that, during one interview, a production manager offered me the part of an evil white man. (Never mind my Japanese roots, he assured me, I was close enough.) After I casually threw out the term “Nollywood” in a conversation with a colleague, a copy editor created this headline for my article: “Step Aside, L.A. and Bombay, for Nollywood.”

The name stuck — and spread. But success hasn’t robbed Nollywood of its freewheeling ways: During my recent visit to a Nigerian village where a half-dozen movies were being shot, a producer came over and, on the spot, offered me the role of an evil white man who brings a vampire to Nigeria.

Back in 2002, the movies were simply known as Nigeria’s home videos. They were popularized at first through video cassettes traded across Africa, but now Nollywood is available on satellite and cable television channels, as well as on streaming services like iRokoTV. In 2012, in response to swelling popularity in Francophone Africa, a satellite channel called Nollywood TV began offering round-the-clock movies dubbed into French. Most Nollywood movies are in English, though some are in one of Nigeria’s main ethnic languages.

Until Nollywood’s ascendance, movies made in Francophone Africa — with grants from the French government — dominated filmmaking on the continent. But these movies catered to the sensibilities of Western critics and viewers, and won few fans in Africa, leaving no cultural footprint.

In Nollywood, though, movies are still financed by private investors expecting a profit.

“You want to do a movie? You have the script? You look immediately for the money and you shoot,” said Mahmood Ali-Balogun, a leading Nigerian filmmaker. “When you get a grant from France or the E.U., they can dictate to you where to put your camera, the fine-tuning of your script. It’s not a good model for us in Africa.”

Mr. Ali-Balogun was speaking from his office in Surulere, Lagos, the birthplace of Nollywood. Film production has since moved to other cities, especially Asaba, an otherwise sleepy state capital in southeastern Nigeria. On any given day, a dozen crews can be found here — “epic” films with ancient story lines like “Beyond the Dance” are in the works in nearby villages, while “glamour” movies about modern life make the city itself their sets.

One recent entry in the glamour category was “Okada 50,” the story of a woman and son who, after leaving their village, open a coffin business in the city and terrorize their neighbors.

Most films have budgets of about $25,000 and are shot in a week.

Once completed in Asaba, the movies find their way to every corner of Africa, released in the original English, dubbed into French or African languages, and sometimes readapted, repackaged and often pirated for local audiences. Many movies are also propelled by a symbiotic relationship with Nigeria’s Pentecostal Christianity, which pastors have exported throughout Africa.

In the Democratic Republic of Congo, pastors who visited Nigeria years ago returned with videocassettes and showed the films in church to teach Christian lessons and attract new members, said Katrien Pype, a Belgian anthropologist at the University of Leuven who has written about the phenomenon.

Today in Kinshasa, the Congolese capital, Nollywood permeates mainstream culture. Local women copy the fashion, makeup and hairstyles of the actresses; local musicians grumble at the popularity of Nigerian imports, like Don Jazzy and the P-Square twins.

Trésor Baka, a Congolese dubber who translates Nollywood movies into the local language, Lingala, said the films are popular because “Nigeria has succeeded in reconciling modernity and their ancient ways, their culture and traditions.”

Nollywood has also created a model for movie production in other African nations, said Matthias Krings, a German expert on African popular culture at Johannes Gutenberg University.

In Kitwe, Zambia, local filmmakers were recently making their latest movie in true Nollywood style: a family melodrama shot over 10 days, in a private home, on a $7,000 budget. Burned onto DVD, the movie will be sold in Zambia and neighboring countries.

Acknowledging the influence of Nigerian cinema, the movie’s producer, Morgan Mbulo, 36, said, “We can tell our own stories now".
https://www.nytimes.com/2016/02/19/world/africa/with-a-boom-before-the-cameras-nigeria-redefines-african-life.html?_r=0

all hail Nollywood

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Re: Nigeria’s Booming Film Industry Redefines African Life - New York Times by anonymous6(f): 3:52pm On Jun 24, 2017
AkQWA:
I love watching Nigerian movies. They should also venture into quality animated movies. With our great story lines, they should be a global hit.

I agree
Re: Nigeria’s Booming Film Industry Redefines African Life - New York Times by ahmad8428: 7:19am On Aug 06, 2020
Hi Every One what do you think about this Netflix series
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Re: Nigeria’s Booming Film Industry Redefines African Life - New York Times by anonymous6(f): 6:52pm On Sep 23, 2020
ahmad8428:
Hi Every One what do you think about this Netflix series
https://toptrendpk.com/best-netflix-series-2020/

Love is Blind and Tiger king is good
Re: Nigeria’s Booming Film Industry Redefines African Life - New York Times by nifanaturals1(f): 9:58pm On Sep 26, 2020

1 Like

Re: Nigeria’s Booming Film Industry Redefines African Life - New York Times by MajohBankz: 3:51pm On Oct 30, 2020
Please guys I'm a script writer but I need help in getting the right producer. I've completed two cinematic movies already. One's an action movie while the other is a legal movie. please how do I get to the right person?
Re: Nigeria’s Booming Film Industry Redefines African Life - New York Times by omobenintv(m): 12:07pm On Dec 12, 2020
Re: Nigeria’s Booming Film Industry Redefines African Life - New York Times by molbic(m): 9:44pm On Dec 27, 2020
well history has it that Nollywood started from LIVING IN BONDAGE SO ANY OTHER AGUEMENT OR TRIBAL WAR HERE IS NOT VALID YOU EITHER ARGUE WITH YOUR keyboard or you shot up although I cant Wast my time on Nollywood movie in this Era of CGI and SCI FI MOVIES
Re: Nigeria’s Booming Film Industry Redefines African Life - New York Times by molbic(m): 10:00pm On Dec 27, 2020
MajohBankz:
Please guys I'm a script writer but I need help in getting the right producer. I've completed two cinematic movies already. One's an action movie while the other is a legal movie. please how do I get to the right person?
Bro you said Action movie make E no be all those Nollywood action movie wey be say you go dey watch all the pictures and status wey dey your living room and compound go cover their faces in shame . All those rubbish zubi michael, kelvin ikeduba , Mike bamiloye and family dey produce in the name of action movie

Re: Nigeria’s Booming Film Industry Redefines African Life - New York Times by MajohBankz: 10:17pm On Dec 27, 2020
molbic:
Bro you said Action movie make E no be all those Nollywood action movie wey be say you go dey watch all the pictures and status wey dey your living room and compound go cover their faces in shame . All those rubbish zubi michael, kelvin ikeduba , Mike bamiloye and family dey produce in the name of action movie
Lol, bro i promise it's not it. It's about a senior inspector made a new dpo to help curb crime in a new town. Since he wouldn't be corrupted like others before him, his family gets kidnapped. Hence, his quest to get them rescued. It's quite original and un-nollywood (if you know what I mean)
Re: Nigeria’s Booming Film Industry Redefines African Life - New York Times by anonymous6(f): 3:56pm On Feb 27, 2021
Thanks @ nifanaturals1
Re: Nigeria’s Booming Film Industry Redefines African Life - New York Times by Ktunzmusic: 4:34pm On Feb 27, 2021
Listen to the song of the courageous boys who says they are taking over the music industry.


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_HCzmyMP7wQ
Re: Nigeria’s Booming Film Industry Redefines African Life - New York Times by Adedamola04: 10:36am On Feb 28, 2021
wizkid vs Davido check out the records davido has broken that wizkid has not broken



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Re: Nigeria’s Booming Film Industry Redefines African Life - New York Times by Nko1: 3:44pm On Nov 26, 2022
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