Monday, August 10, 2009

Nollywood Babylon

Nollywood Babylon (Directors: Ben Addelman and Samir Mallal): Bustling Lagos, Nigeria is the largest met­ro­polis in Africa, with more than 14 mil­lion inhab­it­ants. It’s also the centre of the third-largest film industry in the world, behind only India (Bollywood) and the US (Hollywood). But Nollywood, as it’s called, might be growing quicker than the rest, pro­du­cing more than 2,500 films each year. Director Lancelot Oduwa Imasuen, at 36 years of age, has already dir­ected 157 films!

The film­makers take us on a dizzying tour of the Nollywood film industry, fol­lowing the dynamic and opin­ion­ated Lancelot as he dir­ects Bent Arrows, his 158th fea­ture, and intro­du­cing us to other com­ment­ators, actors, evan­gel­ists and the people who con­sume the movies them­selves. Obviously, based on the sheer output of the industry, these films are made quickly and on the cheap, but as Lancelot boasts, his films con­nect with the people, while other African films, born out of a more tra­di­tional (ie. French) film cul­ture, only play at fest­ivals and then dis­ap­pear. One thoughtful com­ment­ator, poet/writer Odia Ofeimun, laments that Nollywood sprung up after the eco­nomic col­lapse of the 1980s des­troyed the tra­di­tional film industry in Nigeria. Social unrest meant that tra­di­tional busi­ness struc­tures couldn’t operate with any sense of sta­bility, so these DIY film­makers, armed with cheap VHS cam­eras, cre­ated their own film industry. The first Nollywood film was only made in 1992, but is emblem­atic of the move­ment. Living in Bondage dealt with themes of witch­craft and the con­flict with evan­gel­ical Christianity and the modern society it represents.

In fact, many of the films have an evan­gel­istic mes­sage. Seeing the pop­ularity of Nollywood, many of the country’s evan­gel­ists branched out into film pro­duc­tion. Both the church and the Nollywood industry seem to have at least one thing in common: offering solace to the many slum-dwellers who see no way to over­come the poverty and cor­rup­tion they exper­i­ence every day. There is no doubt that the films appeal to the public. In fact, they are par­tially fin­anced by the market shop­keepers who sell them on VCDs (video com­pact discs), who offer advice on everything from casting to plots. But some of the more wistful com­ment­ators (who, granted, are not bene­fiting fin­an­cially from the Nollywood boom) are wor­ried that there is no way that the quick and dirty DIY ethic of Nollywood can ever trans­ition into a more tra­di­tional artistic film cul­ture. Some older Nigerian dir­ectors decry the Nollywood films as “rub­bish” but there doesn’t seem to be any altern­ative film infra­struc­ture. Lagos has only three func­tioning cinemas left, and none of them show Nollywood films. Instead, people watch them at home with friends and neigh­bours. Just like the rest of the world, in Nigeria, the cine­matheque is disappearing.

Near the end of the film, the poet/writer Odia Ofeimun makes a rather chilling con­nec­tion between the churches and mosques and the Nollywood films. Both, he says, charm people with tales of witch­craft, magic, and get­ting rich. Meanwhile, they remain poor, while their gov­ern­ment and society remain cor­rupt. It’s almost as if the film industry and insti­tu­tional reli­gion act as a social safety valve, paci­fying people with man­u­fac­tured hope while keeping them too amused to think of how to really change society. That’s a thought that goes far out­side of Nigeria, but it made me wish the film tried a little harder to find someone not making films just for money or for “the gospel.”

Note: The film is playing here in Toronto from August 11–13 at 7:00pm at the NFB Mediatheque at 150 John Street. Tickets are $6 and are avail­able at the door. Co-director Samir Mallal will be in attend­ance for a Q&A ses­sion on August 11.

Official site of the film

7/10(7/10)

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Here’s my next batch of TIFF hope­fuls. I’ll be nar­rowing it all down to some­where around ten films in total, but this at least reminds me what films are on my radar for follow-up should I not be able to see them all (and who could?):

Air Doll (Kûki ningyô)

Air Doll (Kûki ningyô) (Director: Hirokazu Kore-eda): Kore-eda is well-known as the dir­ector of pre­vious TIFF standouts like Still Walking (2008) and Nobody Knows (2004), but to be honest, it’s Korean act­ress Bae Doo-na that makes me want to see this. I’ve loved her work in films like Linda Linda Linda (review) and The Host (review). The pairing of dir­ector and act­ress is prom­ising enough on its own, but the story, about a “love doll” who comes to life, makes this one irresistible.

Official site of the film (Japanese)

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Gigante

Gigante (Director: Adrian Biniez): I admit that I have a soft spot for small, often-overlooked coun­tries. My wife and I vis­ited Uruguay in 2005 and were cap­tiv­ated by its charm. As a small country between two powerful neigh­bours (Brazil and Argentina), Uruguay has developed an inter­esting sense of humour that reminds me very much of our Canadian one. Gigante is a love story about a store security guard who falls in love with a cleaning lady via security camera.

Note: Continuing their win­ning run lately, US distributor/film club Film Movement have already picked this up for American dis­tri­bu­tion.

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Police, Adjective

Police, Adjective (Director: Corneliu Poromboiu): From the dir­ector of 12:08 East of Bucharest, this one looks to be a talky med­it­a­tion on the law. A policeman refuses to arrest a young man for offering drugs to his friends, and becomes embroiled in a struggle with his superior over the meaning of words such as “con­science,” “law,” and “moral.” Sounds a bit dull on paper but has the poten­tial for some intel­lec­tu­ally stim­u­lating humour. (The embedded trailer below isn’t sub­titled, so it’s hard to know, but the reviews from Cannes have been good.)

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