It is day five of filming in the Nigerian crime movie The Controllers, and two members of a fraud syndicate are having a stand-off at their boss's luxury pad. The stony silence between the pair, however, is nothing to do with the build-up of dramatic tension.Out of curiosity, I did a Youtube search for 'Nollywood' and came across this fascinating religiously themed move - The Preacher.
"You don't know your lines!" scolds the director, pointing at the script that one actor hasn't bothered to memorise. "We won't film until you know what you're supposed to say."
In Hollywood, or indeed its Indian cousin Bollywood, such behaviour would not be tolerated. But this is Nollywood, and in Nigeria's answer to Tinseltown, the words "Lights, camera, action" are not so much a catchphrase as a wish list.
Cast members routinely learn their script a few minutes before going on camera, if indeed they turn up at all. The lighting on set is constantly interrupted by power cuts. And when one of the Controllers has a brush with the law, the policeman turns out to have a set of working handcuffs, but no key.
Yet despite low production values, trite plots, and acting that would shame an amateur dramatics production, Nollywood is booming like never before.
Typically producing each film in less than a fortnight, for $15,000 a time, the country's high-speed, low-budget movie industry is one of Nigeria's few success stories. It churns out up to 2,000 offerings a year and outsells both its western and eastern competitors.
(snip)
Nigeria's home-grown film industry began in the early Nineties, when rampant street crime in big cities like Lagos forced mainstream cinemas to shut, and import restrictions made foreign films scarce.
Local entrepreneurs stepped in, helped by the growth in cheap camera technology.
Their films, sold on CDs for 500 naira (£1.50) a time, are all "straight to video", in that they are made for the rental and retail markets rather than the cinema.
Plots reflect the concerns of everyday Nigerian life: in The Controllers, for example, Cosmo is a wealthy "419" scamster, specialising in internet fraud. Other films deal with Aids, corruption and witchcraft, as well as re-enacting ancient tribal folk tales.
Be it a voodoo flick or a romance, filming is seldom easy. In Lagos, just getting cast and crew together is hard because of the two and three-hour traffic jams that clog the roads.
Street filming also attracts the attention of "Area Boys", hoodlums who charge "taxes" on producers, and vast crowds of onlookers.
"You will get street hawkers wandering past, yelling loudly just as you are filming a scene," said Mr Mackenzie. "You have to pay people to stay out of the way, or hire armed cops."
Once the film is in the can, there are the censors to worry about. Mindful of threats to public morality, Nigeria's state film watchdog disapproves of movies in which criminals get away with it.
"If you film one where a crime boss isn't punished or jailed, you may be asked to reshoot," said Mr Mackenzie. "A lot of film makers just dodge the censors altogether."
Sunday, May 06, 2007
Hollywood, Bollywood and Nollywood?
From the Telegraph:
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1 comment:
wow. that film looks just horrifying. am i taking it too seriously?
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