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Nollywood Is Preserving The African Film - Nigerian Films - Culture - Nairaland

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Nollywood Is Preserving The African Film - Nigerian Films by anonymous6(f): 3:56pm On Aug 04, 2014
[b]"The BBC Africa Kick Bus arrived Nigeria on Monday, June 7, 2010. On board were Alex Jocana, presenter of the BBC ‘Have Your Say Programme’, his technical team and cynicism.

After taking a swipe at Nigeria’s importance to Africa, they cornered Nollywood practitioners at Ojez Restaurant in Surelere to deepen the wounds of her scorn. Only they took it a tad too far.

Mr Jocana asked if Nollywood helping or harming African film making capability? While the question appears innocent enough, subsequent questions gave away the intention of the programme. The ladder leaned heavily on the wall of cynicism. But this is what we expect of the western media. They follow the stench of negative news in Africa as avidly as a carnivore does the fresh scent of blood.

During the Golden Age of Hollywood from the start of the silent era in the late 1920’s to 1950’s, African filmmakers were not allowed to make films due to colonialism. Some of the most popular early films about Africa including The African Queen, Tarzan, and King Solomon's Mines foisted upon Africa a stereotype so horrid, they called it the “Dark Continent”.

When the European invaders gave us a flag and a song and told us we were free, Africans began telling their own stories. Ousmane Sembene’s La Noire de (Black Girl) gained international acclaim. In 1969, the African film festival (FESPACO) was established and enlarged the frontiers of African film. Many of these early films dealt with subjects like colonialism and mundane African issues. The film makers raised funds mostly by groveling before International agencies and governments amenable to Western influence. The films were mostly elitist and excluded the masses in the main though they were shot on 35mm.

The summary of the history of African film does not take a prize for inspiration. How do we continue telling the story of colonialism 50 years after most of the colonialists are long dead? How much progress is there for the African film if it continues to grovel for funds from Shylock lenders and/or exacting donors and subservient governments? And how do we establish a film culture when it excludes the very people for whom film is made? Is it wise to insist on shooting on 35mm in a continent where cinema houses are being converted to churches and warehouses?

These were the thorny issues the emergence of Nollywood addressed. Seventeen years later, Nollywood has achieved global acclaim - eat your heart out Hollywood!

Nollywood created a whole new paradigm with which African film can be measured. It addressed issues that found relevance in people’s reality. It sympathised with their trials; it provided them company in their pain. For youths in Ghana and Nigeria, Nollywood has given wings to their dreams. Nollywood destroyed the stereotype created by Tarzan and King Solomon’s Mines that Africa was a race of savages. Nollywood is the new African film.

Nollywood challenged the norm and took the story to the people that matter. Ahmed an analyst on the show from Kenya put the point succinctly. The success of Nollywood lies in the fact that the audience are accepting what they make. Another analyst from New York also gave a vivid account of the influence of Nollywood in Uncle Sam’s own country. The Asians especially she said are making a fortune pirating Nollywood movies.

While other African countries were closing their cinema houses due to the prohibitive cost and the sophistication shooting on 35mm demands, coupled with a poor distribution framework in Africa, Nollywood began shooting direct to video. This method was lampooned at first but now it has become the method of choice for African filmmakers. In this way Nollywood saved the African film from extinction. South Africa, with a film that has won an Oscar and several nominations has not even achieved the acclaim Nollywood has garnered.
Yet these are not the best of times for Nollywood. The session with Nollywood practitioners in Ojez Resturant revealed to a large extent, the rot in the system. It indicated that perhaps, more than anything else, Nollywood’s biggest problem is that it has become a victim of its own success.

I listened with shame as Nollywood practitioners came a short crawl away from using their fists in the heated debate. Amidst jeers, Emeka Ike insisted he was AGN President. Zack Orji took the microphone and rebutted. Femi Durojaiye introduced himself as AGN Secretary General so many times, he began to call himself National President of AGN. Tari West got stuck in the middle of former Presidential, and 2nd Vice Chairman, and currently the 1st vice presidential chairman of... (She forgot what association she purportedly chairs – all of them fighting over a piece of carcass they are fast turning Nollywood into.

Absence of credible structures, government’s indifference and aloofness, poor technical know-how and the substitution of professionalism for nepotism are conspiring to bring Nollywood to her kneels. Virtually all the commentators took a swipe at scriptwriters yet few are willing to pay for top notch writers instead they rely on a distant cousin in distant high school. The problem with Nollywood has taken on Sisyphean proportions. The industry needs creative thinking and pragmatic actions rather than the thousand tones of noise currently emanating from its practitioners. "[/b]
http://www.nigeriafilms.com/news/8043/12/nollywood-is-preserving-the-african-film.html

[img]http://2.bp..com/_PvUotaRqpZo/TL2539vrxwI/AAAAAAAAHi4/sE702OrikxE/s1600/Ini+Edo2.JPG[/img]

2 Likes

Re: Nollywood Is Preserving The African Film - Nigerian Films by jamaicanoshu(m): 5:28pm On Aug 04, 2014
Nollywood must demand their own cable tv licenses . The money received from this venture could be used to bank roll 80-100 channels of Nollywood content. Rather than the measly 4 channels they presently have;they could march across Africa offering cartoons ,games,sports ,anything that American Tv offers. The Eaglets just played a match in Congo. this could have been brought live via a Nollywood sports channel! Imagine the advertising revenue that could be generated from these cable channels. Nollywood should expand to all forms of entertainment : porn ,theme parks ,novels,magazines ,radio,music and sports. They should expand street level distribution across America and the Caribbean by combining with local music in these areas . Finally they should use the Kemetic or Ancient Egyptian theme in their historical films. Dr. Malachi York and the Nuwaupians exploited this theme in their books and films.

5 Likes

Re: Nollywood Is Preserving The African Film - Nigerian Films by anonymous6(f): 5:35pm On Aug 04, 2014
jamaicanoshu: Nollywood must demand their own cable tv licenses . The money received from this venture could be used to bank roll 80-100 channels of Nollywood content. Rather than the measly 4 channels they presently have;they could march across Africa offering cartoons ,games,sports ,anything that American Tv offers. The Eaglets just played a match in Congo. this could have been brought live via a Nollywood sports channel! Imagine the advertising revenue that could be generated from these cable channels. Nollywood should expand to all forms of entertainment : porn ,theme parks ,novels,magazines ,radio,music and sports. They should expand street level distribution across America and the Caribbean by combining with local music in these areas . Finally they should use the Kemetic or Ancient Egyptian theme in their historical films. Dr. Malachi York and the Nuwaupians exploited this theme in their books and films.

True, It may be difficult but possible. Their are some cable TV licenses owed by non-nollywood nigerian companies though, I know there is one that operates from Nigeria nad has a channel in southern states in America but not operational in other regions of the US. Overall it's inevitable Nollywood is progressing and leading to what you have mentioned. IrokoTV is a example of how Nollywood is moving towards that direction.
Re: Nollywood Is Preserving The African Film - Nigerian Films by shadowwalker101: 2:08am On Aug 05, 2014
nnice pictures but long post
[img]http://www.?aff=391[/img]
Re: Nollywood Is Preserving The African Film - Nigerian Films by Sagytarius(m): 2:22am On Aug 05, 2014
And how does that stop them from acting movies dramas that are easy to decipher how they end? undecided

2 Likes

Re: Nollywood Is Preserving The African Film - Nigerian Films by Afrocatalyst: 2:26am On Aug 05, 2014
Yes,they did create a paradigm shift in the making of African movies, but like you also said, aren't they trying to be the architect of their own downfall by not having the capacity to manage themselves and chart a clear course?

Must every tom, dick and harry chair an organisation in the so called 'Nollywood'?

Why not concentrate on making quality films than bring in the same power tussle that has kept the country standstill into that beautiful organisation of creative minds?

Even tho they make more films,their movie has never been nominated for the OSCAR unlike their counterpart,South African Movie Industry, even with fewer films compared to Nollywood. Food for thought!

1 Like

Re: Nollywood Is Preserving The African Film - Nigerian Films by pussypounder(m): 2:34am On Aug 05, 2014
No be only Nollywood, na firewood

14 Likes

Re: Nollywood Is Preserving The African Film - Nigerian Films by Nobody: 2:44am On Aug 05, 2014
Very short post


Which other story do we have?





Finest boy loves Telemundo
Elena's Ghost

Broken angel go make o
Re: Nollywood Is Preserving The African Film - Nigerian Films by MisterLongman(m): 3:01am On Aug 05, 2014
pussypounder: No be only Nollywood, na firewood
Re: Nollywood Is Preserving The African Film - Nigerian Films by Nobody: 3:04am On Aug 05, 2014
anonymous6: [b]"The BBC Africa Kick Bus arrived Nigeria on Monday, June 7, 2010. On board were Alex Jocana, presenter of the BBC ‘Have Your Say Programme’, his technical team and cynicism.

After taking a swipe at Nigeria’s importance to Africa, they cornered Nollywood practitioners at Ojez Restaurant in Surelere to deepen the wounds of her scorn. Only they took it a tad too far.

Mr Jocana asked if Nollywood helping or harming African film making capability? While the question appears innocent enough, subsequent questions gave away the intention of the programme. The ladder leaned heavily on the wall of cynicism. But this is what we expect of the western media. They follow the stench of negative news in Africa as avidly as a carnivore does the fresh scent of blood.

During the Golden Age of Hollywood from the start of the silent era in the late 1920’s to 1950’s, African filmmakers were not allowed to make films due to colonialism. Some of the most popular early films about Africa including The African Queen, Tarzan, and King Solomon's Mines foisted upon Africa a stereotype so horrid, they called it the “Dark Continent”.

When the European invaders gave us a flag and a song and told us we were free, Africans began telling their own stories. Ousmane Sembene’s La Noire de (Black Girl) gained international acclaim. In 1969, the African film festival (FESPACO) was established and enlarged the frontiers of African film. Many of these early films dealt with subjects like colonialism and mundane African issues. The film makers raised funds mostly by groveling before International agencies and governments amenable to Western influence. The films were mostly elitist and excluded the masses in the main though they were shot on 35mm.

The summary of the history of African film does not take a prize for inspiration. How do we continue telling the story of colonialism 50 years after most of the colonialists are long dead? How much progress is there for the African film if it continues to grovel for funds from Shylock lenders and/or exacting donors and subservient governments? And how do we establish a film culture when it excludes the very people for whom film is made? Is it wise to insist on shooting on 35mm in a continent where cinema houses are being converted to churches and warehouses?

These were the thorny issues the emergence of Nollywood addressed. Seventeen years later, Nollywood has achieved global acclaim - eat your heart out Hollywood!

Nollywood created a whole new paradigm with which African film can be measured. It addressed issues that found relevance in people’s reality. It sympathised with their trials; it provided them company in their pain. For youths in Ghana and Nigeria, Nollywood has given wings to their dreams. Nollywood destroyed the stereotype created by Tarzan and King Solomon’s Mines that Africa was a race of savages. Nollywood is the new African film.

Nollywood challenged the norm and took the story to the people that matter. Ahmed an analyst on the show from Kenya put the point succinctly. The success of Nollywood lies in the fact that the audience are accepting what they make. Another analyst from New York also gave a vivid account of the influence of Nollywood in Uncle Sam’s own country. The Asians especially she said are making a fortune pirating Nollywood movies.

While other African countries were closing their cinema houses due to the prohibitive cost and the sophistication shooting on 35mm demands, coupled with a poor distribution framework in Africa, Nollywood began shooting direct to video. This method was lampooned at first but now it has become the method of choice for African filmmakers. In this way Nollywood saved the African film from extinction. South Africa, with a film that has won an Oscar and several nominations has not even achieved the acclaim Nollywood has garnered.
Yet these are not the best of times for Nollywood. The session with Nollywood practitioners in Ojez Resturant revealed to a large extent, the rot in the system. It indicated that perhaps, more than anything else, Nollywood’s biggest problem is that it has become a victim of its own success.

I listened with shame as Nollywood practitioners came a short crawl away from using their fists in the heated debate. Amidst jeers, Emeka Ike insisted he was AGN President. Zack Orji took the microphone and rebutted. Femi Durojaiye introduced himself as AGN Secretary General so many times, he began to call himself National President of AGN. Tari West got stuck in the middle of former Presidential, and 2nd Vice Chairman, and currently the 1st vice presidential chairman of... (She forgot what association she purportedly chairs – all of them fighting over a piece of carcass they are fast turning Nollywood into.

Absence of credible structures, government’s indifference and aloofness, poor technical know-how and the substitution of professionalism for nepotism are conspiring to bring Nollywood to her kneels. Virtually all the commentators took a swipe at scriptwriters yet few are willing to pay for top notch writers instead they rely on a distant cousin in distant high school. The problem with Nollywood has taken on Sisyphean proportions. The industry needs creative thinking and pragmatic actions rather than the thousand tones of noise currently emanating from its practitioners. "[/b]
http://www.nigeriafilms.com/news/8043/12/nollywood-is-preserving-the-african-film.html

[img]http://2.bp..com/_PvUotaRqpZo/TL2539vrxwI/AAAAAAAAHi4/sE702OrikxE/s1600/Ini+Edo2.JPG[/img]

Nollywood is a disappointment to Nigeria, this industry haven't done nothing for this country, they only care about their selfish self.. Nigerians need jobs from nollyhood but they ignored and travel all the way to ghana to enrich nadia buhari and co.

Now ebola is going on rampage and this guys just like kanu are taking pictures with new outfit.
SMH for nigeria

NB: Anybody with a different opinion can speak without quoting me
Regards
Donnypool

1 Like

Re: Nollywood Is Preserving The African Film - Nigerian Films by hensben(m): 3:09am On Aug 05, 2014
people still dey watch nollywood

4 Likes

Re: Nollywood Is Preserving The African Film - Nigerian Films by LMAyedun(m): 3:23am On Aug 05, 2014
pussypounder: No be only Nollywood, na firewood
LOL!! grin
You again!

2 Likes

Re: Nollywood Is Preserving The African Film - Nigerian Films by Nobody: 3:25am On Aug 05, 2014
hensben: people still dey watch nollywood

Naija girls o

Then dem go cm dey speak "pho ne"

Wey dem learn from Mr.Ibu

1 Like

Re: Nollywood Is Preserving The African Film - Nigerian Films by Nobody: 3:26am On Aug 05, 2014
pussypounder: No be only Nollywood, na firewood

grin grin grin

3 Likes

Re: Nollywood Is Preserving The African Film - Nigerian Films by Nobody: 3:27am On Aug 05, 2014
Ghollywood.

Pornwood

grin grin grin

1 Like

Re: Nollywood Is Preserving The African Film - Nigerian Films by leonard509(m): 3:27am On Aug 05, 2014
What the EFFFF Did you just say? with All this their ''nkechi the blind princess'''' And this blockburster,, mmmmttttcccchhheeewwwww,, firewood indeed

Re: Nollywood Is Preserving The African Film - Nigerian Films by anonymous6(f): 4:34am On Aug 05, 2014
donnypool:

Nollywood is a disappointment to Nigeria, this industry haven't done nothing for this country, they only care about their selfish self.. Nigerians need jobs from nollyhood but they ignored and travel all the way to ghana to enrich nadia buhari and co.

Now ebola is going on rampage and this guys just like kanu are taking pictures with new outfit.
SMH for nigeria

NB: Anybody with a different opinion can speak without quoting me
Regards
Donnypool

Well It's a work in progress for Nollywood, not making excuses for them cause their needs to be improvements with the industry but it was announced that they are worth over 2 Billion now and they have been creating jobs in Nigeria, I guess not good enough.

After the boycott or fine of Nollywood actors/actresses, producers and etc to appear in ghollywood, from what the media said, Nollywood retaliated and did the samething back to Ghana. Eventually it subsided and the boycott and banns were stopped on both sides but it was said many Nollywood directors were cautious and were retreating back in finding talent in Nigeria now after that experience.

http://www.punchng.com/news/nollywood-created-two-million-jobs-in-20-years-zulu-news-room-nannewsroomnanngronline-com-sent-21-june-2/
http://www.thenigerianvoice.com/movie/31429/6/nigeria-and-ghana-at-war.html
http://www.modernghana.com/music/10881/3/ghanaian-actors-banned-in-nollywood.html
https://www.nairaland.com/972577/ghanaian-movies-banned-nigeria
Re: Nollywood Is Preserving The African Film - Nigerian Films by anonymous6(f): 4:35am On Aug 05, 2014
pussypounder: No be only Nollywood, na firewood

Lmao
Re: Nollywood Is Preserving The African Film - Nigerian Films by sammyjay3(m): 4:38am On Aug 05, 2014
Yea with time we'll surpass hollywood
Re: Nollywood Is Preserving The African Film - Nigerian Films by Nobody: 4:40am On Aug 05, 2014
jamaicanoshu: Nollywood must demand their own cable tv licenses . The money received from this venture could be used to bank roll 80-100 channels of Nollywood content. Rather than the measly 4 channels they presently have;they could march across Africa offering cartoons ,games,sports ,anything that American Tv offers. The Eaglets just played a match in Congo. this could have been brought live via a Nollywood sports channel! Imagine the advertising revenue that could be generated from these cable channels. Nollywood should expand to all forms of entertainment : porn ,theme parks ,novels,magazines ,radio,music and sports. They should expand street level distribution across America and the Caribbean by combining with local music in these areas . Finally they should use the Kemetic or Ancient Egyptian theme in their historical films. Dr. Malachi York and the Nuwaupians exploited this theme in their books and films.
i had to
Re: Nollywood Is Preserving The African Film - Nigerian Films by OkikiOluwa1(m): 4:49am On Aug 05, 2014
Sagytarius: And how does that stop them from acting movies dramas that are easy to decipher how they end? undecided
We must still credit Nollywood. It opened the eye of Africans

1 Like

Re: Nollywood Is Preserving The African Film - Nigerian Films by Descartes: 6:04am On Aug 05, 2014
Nollywood setting the pace in movies industries in Africa since 500 BC. cool

1 Like

Re: Nollywood Is Preserving The African Film - Nigerian Films by johnwarax(m): 6:55am On Aug 05, 2014
Nollywood needs to upgrade. Instead they are actually downgrading. Maybe they are afraid of the unknown. They don't want to leave their comfort zone.

Their movies are like jokes to me. They produced movies with unnecessary scenes like; how an actor drove a car out of the house, too long dancing in club, crying to mention but a few. These unnecessary scenes are just to make the movie long. And these movie end up having one name for part one and two, then another name for the continuation.

I can't see myself watching a Nollywood rubbish. They need to rethink their market strategy and give us our old way of movie production bank. I really means the epic era of Teco Benson, Andy Best, OJ.etc. So for the now, I have to continue watching my telemundos and Hollywood movies.
Re: Nollywood Is Preserving The African Film - Nigerian Films by neuljosh(m): 7:03am On Aug 05, 2014
still reading smiley
Re: Nollywood Is Preserving The African Film - Nigerian Films by jihday(m): 7:11am On Aug 05, 2014
Somewhere in Nigeria a nollywood producer is about to release a movie titled 'Ebola'

2 Likes

Re: Nollywood Is Preserving The African Film - Nigerian Films by J0nyb0y(m): 7:57am On Aug 05, 2014
sammyjay3: Yea with time we'll surpass hollywood
bro wake up! Its morning already

1 Like

Re: Nollywood Is Preserving The African Film - Nigerian Films by ReubenAbati: 8:44am On Aug 05, 2014
jihday: Somewhere in Nigeria a nollywood producer is about to release a movie titled 'Ebola'

YouDon'tMeanIT!!
Re: Nollywood Is Preserving The African Film - Nigerian Films by Nobody: 9:06am On Aug 05, 2014
Lemme read 1st.




Fact:Nigerians are backward. Expect nothing good from Nollywood.
Re: Nollywood Is Preserving The African Film - Nigerian Films by Erotex(m): 10:18am On Aug 05, 2014
hensben: people still dey watch nollywood
No!
Na yorubawood!!
Haters go die #Nollywood4Eva

1 Like

Re: Nollywood Is Preserving The African Film - Nigerian Films by hensben(m): 10:26am On Aug 05, 2014
Erotex:
No!
Na yorubawood!!
Haters go die #Nollywood4Eva
, i thought nollywood is a nigeria movie industry, which wan be haters again, so make i dey watch wetin nor make sense, were mr ibu dey wear primary school uniform.

i think you are the hater cos you dont want them to improve so they can write good story line
Re: Nollywood Is Preserving The African Film - Nigerian Films by Orikinla(m): 10:42am On Aug 05, 2014
anonymous6: [b]"The BBC Africa Kick Bus arrived Nigeria on Monday, June 7, 2010. On board were Alex Jocana, presenter of the BBC ‘Have Your Say Programme’, his technical team and cynicism.

After taking a swipe at Nigeria’s importance to Africa, they cornered Nollywood practitioners at Ojez Restaurant in Surelere to deepen the wounds of her scorn. Only they took it a tad too far.

Mr Jocana asked if Nollywood helping or harming African film making capability? While the question appears innocent enough, subsequent questions gave away the intention of the programme. The ladder leaned heavily on the wall of cynicism. But this is what we expect of the western media. They follow the stench of negative news in Africa as avidly as a carnivore does the fresh scent of blood.

During the Golden Age of Hollywood from the start of the silent era in the late 1920’s to 1950’s, African filmmakers were not allowed to make films due to colonialism. Some of the most popular early films about Africa including The African Queen, Tarzan, and King Solomon's Mines foisted upon Africa a stereotype so horrid, they called it the “Dark Continent”.

When the European invaders gave us a flag and a song and told us we were free, Africans began telling their own stories. Ousmane Sembene’s La Noire de (Black Girl) gained international acclaim. In 1969, the African film festival (FESPACO) was established and enlarged the frontiers of African film. Many of these early films dealt with subjects like colonialism and mundane African issues. The film makers raised funds mostly by groveling before International agencies and governments amenable to Western influence. The films were mostly elitist and excluded the masses in the main though they were shot on 35mm.

The summary of the history of African film does not take a prize for inspiration. How do we continue telling the story of colonialism 50 years after most of the colonialists are long dead? How much progress is there for the African film if it continues to grovel for funds from Shylock lenders and/or exacting donors and subservient governments? And how do we establish a film culture when it excludes the very people for whom film is made? Is it wise to insist on shooting on 35mm in a continent where cinema houses are being converted to churches and warehouses?

These were the thorny issues the emergence of Nollywood addressed. Seventeen years later, Nollywood has achieved global acclaim - eat your heart out Hollywood!

Nollywood created a whole new paradigm with which African film can be measured. It addressed issues that found relevance in people’s reality. It sympathised with their trials; it provided them company in their pain. For youths in Ghana and Nigeria, Nollywood has given wings to their dreams. Nollywood destroyed the stereotype created by Tarzan and King Solomon’s Mines that Africa was a race of savages. Nollywood is the new African film.

Nollywood challenged the norm and took the story to the people that matter. Ahmed an analyst on the show from Kenya put the point succinctly. The success of Nollywood lies in the fact that the audience are accepting what they make. Another analyst from New York also gave a vivid account of the influence of Nollywood in Uncle Sam’s own country. The Asians especially she said are making a fortune pirating Nollywood movies.

While other African countries were closing their cinema houses due to the prohibitive cost and the sophistication shooting on 35mm demands, coupled with a poor distribution framework in Africa, Nollywood began shooting direct to video. This method was lampooned at first but now it has become the method of choice for African filmmakers. In this way Nollywood saved the African film from extinction. South Africa, with a film that has won an Oscar and several nominations has not even achieved the acclaim Nollywood has garnered.
Yet these are not the best of times for Nollywood. The session with Nollywood practitioners in Ojez Resturant revealed to a large extent, the rot in the system. It indicated that perhaps, more than anything else, Nollywood’s biggest problem is that it has become a victim of its own success.

I listened with shame as Nollywood practitioners came a short crawl away from using their fists in the heated debate. Amidst jeers, Emeka Ike insisted he was AGN President. Zack Orji took the microphone and rebutted. Femi Durojaiye introduced himself as AGN Secretary General so many times, he began to call himself National President of AGN. Tari West got stuck in the middle of former Presidential, and 2nd Vice Chairman, and currently the 1st vice presidential chairman of... (She forgot what association she purportedly chairs – all of them fighting over a piece of carcass they are fast turning Nollywood into.

Absence of credible structures, government’s indifference and aloofness, poor technical know-how and the substitution of professionalism for nepotism are conspiring to bring Nollywood to her kneels. Virtually all the commentators took a swipe at scriptwriters yet few are willing to pay for top notch writers instead they rely on a distant cousin in distant high school. The problem with Nollywood has taken on Sisyphean proportions. The industry needs creative thinking and pragmatic actions rather than the thousand tones of noise currently emanating from its practitioners. "[/b]
http://www.nigeriafilms.com/news/8043/12/nollywood-is-preserving-the-african-film.html

[img]http://2.bp..com/_PvUotaRqpZo/TL2539vrxwI/AAAAAAAAHi4/sE702OrikxE/s1600/Ini+Edo2.JPG[/img]

Thank you for sharing this.
Nollywood has come to stay.
But the worst enemies of Nollywood are the desperate and greedy title chasers who compete for the leadership of their dysfunctional associations and guilds for childish bragging rights and petty egos and fighting over government handouts.

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