AN AFRICAN academic with a coiffed mane is sipping coffee in a Ghanaian
airport when he spots a pulpy Nigerian film on an overhead screen. “A travesty,
a grave crime,” he splutters. “Such imbecile images should never be shown in
this country. They are veritably poisoning our culture.”
It is hard to avoid Nigerian films in Africa. Public buses show them, as
do many restaurants and hotels. Nollywood, as the business is known, churns out
about 50 full-length features a week, making it the world's second most prolific
film industry after India's Bollywood. The Nigerian business capital, Lagos, is
said by locals to have produced more films than there are stars in the sky. The
streets are flooded with camera crews shooting on location. Only the government
employs more people.
Nigerian films are as popular abroad as they are at home. Ivorian rebels
in the bush stop fighting when a shipment of DVDs arrives from Lagos. Zambian
mothers say their children talk with accents learnt from Nigerian television.
When the president of Sierra Leone asked Genevieve Nnaji, a Lagosian screen
goddess, to join him on the campaign trail he attracted record crowds at
rallies. Millions of Africans watch Nigerian films every day, many more than
see American fare. And yet Africans have mixed feelings about Nollywood.
Among Africa's elites, hostility is almost uniform. Jean Rouch, a
champion of indigenous art in Niger, has compared Nollywood to the AIDS virus.
Cultural critics complain about “macabre scenes full of sorcery” in the films.
The more alarmist describe Nigerian directors and producers as voodoo priests
casting malign spells over audiences in other countries. They talk of the
“Nigerianisation” of Africa, worrying that the whole continent has come to
“snap its fingers the Nigerian way”.
Governments can be hostile, too. Several have brought in protectionist
measures, including spurious production fees. In July Ghana started demanding
$1,000 from visiting actors and $5,000 from producers and directors. The
Democratic Republic of Congo has tried to ban Nigerian films altogether. Five
decades after much of Africa gained independence, its elites fear being
re-colonised, this time from within the continent. “The Nigerians will eat
everything we have,” says a former official at the Ghanaian ministry of
chieftaincy and culture.
Nollywood's moguls make no attempt to deny their influence over the
continent—they just regard it as a thoroughly good thing. “We give Africa
development and knowledge,” says Ernest Obi, head of the Lagos actors' guild,
during a break from auditioning a gaggle of teenage girls dressed in ball
gowns. “We teach people things. If they call us colonial masters, too bad.”
Picking up the colonists' tools
The history of cinema in Africa is bound up with colonialism. The
continent's first films were imported by European rulers and shown in grand
viewing halls with columned porticos. The aim was to entertain expatriates, but
also to impress and cow locals. John Obago, a retired teacher, was eight when
he saw his first moving picture in 1930s Kenya. “Oh, the elders did not like
it,” he remembers. “But we just loved it. We were fascinated sitting there on
the clean floor and seeing these white people get in and out of restaurants and
buses.”
American and European directors were soon visiting the continent. They
enthusiastically filmed elephant hunts, vividly coloured parrots and dutiful
but dim native porters. They produced some classics. “The African Queen”,
starring Humphrey Bogart and Katharine Hepburn and shot on location in Uganda
and Congo, has aged particularly well. But many “jungle epics” were greeted
with charges of racism. In the heated era of independence they came to be seen
as tools of foreign domination.
The first true Nollywood film resulted from an ill-advised business
venture. In 1992 Kenneth Nnebue, a trader, ordered a large consignment of blank
videotapes from Taiwan. Finding them hard to sell, he hired a theatre director
to make a cheap film and copied it onto the tapes to boost their appeal.
“Living in Bondage”, the story of a retrenched banker in a big city who kills
his wife in a ritual sacrifice and is haunted by her ghost, sold more than half
a million copies.
Many Nigerians still remember the first time they saw “Living in
Bondage”. Odion, a drug addict with a toothless smirk on a street corner in
central Lagos, says, “All of us kids at the time, even the under-tens, watched
it and we just had to have more. I tell you, I tried many things since then.
None is as addictive.”
The market traders control Nollywood to this day. They make films for
home consumption rather than for the cinema—a place few can afford, or reach
easily. DVD discs sell for a dollar. Print runs can reach a million. Studios,
both in the physical and the corporate sense of the term, are unknown. There
are no lots, no sound stages and no trailers for the stars. “Films are made on
the run, sometimes literally,” says Emem Isong, one of Nigeria's few female
producers, during a shoot. “Some of the guys are hiding from the police.”
There are no studios and no film lots. Market traders double as
financiers
All scenes are shot on location and with a shoestring budget of no more
than $100,000. Most of the financiers are based in a vast, chaotic market
called Idumota. It is a maze within a labyrinth. Crowds push through narrow,
covered alleys. The sound of honking motorbikes is drowned out by blaring
television sets showing film trailers. The flickering screens light up dim stalls
lined with thousands of DVDs on narrow wooden shelves.
Desmond Akudinobi, a small man with darting eyes, runs a stall the size
of a double bed. He opened it in 1999. By 2005 he had raised $20,000 to finance
his first film. It was called “Without Apology” and made a small profit. Since
then he has produced 10 more films. Every six months or so he buys a script
from one of the many itinerant writers trawling the market, and hires a
producer and crew. He prints discs in Alaba, another Lagos market. Some go onto
his grimy shelves; many others are exported.
Bandit impresarios
As soon as a film is released, copyright thieves rip it off. It takes
the pirates just two weeks to copy a new film and distribute it across Africa.
The merchants must take their money during that fortnight, known as the “mating
season”, before their discs become commodities. As soon as the mating season is
over they start thinking about the next film.
The merchants curse the pirates, but in a way they are a blessing.
Pirate gangs were probably Nollywood's first exporters. They knew how to cross
tricky borders and distribute goods across a disparate continent where vast
tracts of land are inaccessible. Sometimes they filled empty bags with films
when returning from an arms delivery. Often they used films to bribe bored
guards at remote borders. The pirates created the pan-African market Mr
Akudinobi now feeds.
Other African countries made films long before Nollywood. Senegal in
particular produced many movies featuring traditional songs and dances. Critics
referred to such products as “embassy films” after their mostly diplomatic
financiers (notably the French foreign ministry). Many catered to the
sensibilities of their European sponsors. Scenes were laboriously captured on
celluloid, at great expense. By contrast, Nollywood is cheap and nimble. Films
are shot on digital videocameras. Scripts are improvised. Camera work can be
shoddy and editing slapdash. But the sheer volume of output—a response to the
piracy problem—eventually overwhelmed the embassy films.
Several things have aided Nollywood's growth. Atrocious state-run
television and slow internet connections mean there is little competition for
entertainment. A steady decline in the price of digital cameras and a rise in
average incomes makes for healthy profit margins. Yet the same conditions exist
in many developing-world countries that have not created vibrant film
industries. Three other ingredients are crucial to Nollywood's formula:
language, casting and plotting.
The triumph of English
In Europe films intended for export are often dubbed or subtitled. In
Africa the former is too expensive and the latter pointless since many viewers
are illiterate. The actors in Mr Akudinobi's films speak English, rather than
one of Nigeria's 521 native tongues. This helps their prospects abroad. Large
parts of the continent are familiar with English thanks to colonialism, and
Nollywood's influence is spreading the language more widely.
Clever casting is as important as the choice of language. Producers
routinely hire actors from target countries to broaden their films' appeal. A
Kenyan might be cast to aid a marketing campaign in Kenya; a South African will
be cast to appeal to South Africans. “I need a known face in each market,”
explains a veteran producer.
Diverse casts can often be assembled without leaving Lagos. Actors from
across the continent flock to the city's Surulere district, hanging out in the
muddy bars around Winis Hotel and at Ojez, a late-night restaurant with a band.
Miriam, a gangly girl from Benin, is drinking beer in the afternoon. “I'm
waiting for my first role,” she says. “We have so crazy many Nollywood films at
home. They must want someone like me, right?”
The films' plots too have strong pan-African appeal. They often revolve
around the travails of new arrivals in big cities—an experience familiar across
the continent. The epic film “One God One Nation” portrays a Muslim man and a
Christian woman who struggle to marry. “Caught in the Act” shows a wife who is
wrongly accused by her own mother-in-law of abducting a child. Nollywood films
depict families whose faith has been shattered, whose certainties have been
undermined. They show ordinary people struggling to make sense of a
fast-changing, unkind world. Aspirations are dashed. Trust is forsaken. The
overarching theme of Nollywood films is Africa's troubled journey to modernity.
Because Hollywood films tend to show people at the other end of that journey,
they fail to resonate.
Plenty of juju and Jesus
African elites sneer at the frequent displays of witchcraft in Nigerian
films. Traditional curses are imposed, spirits wander, juju blood flows.
The tribulations of modern life are often shown to be the result of shadowy
machinations. Murder and the occult are never far from the surface. “It is the
Nollywood equivalent of the Hollywood horror movie,” says Ms Isong, the
producer.
Yet tormented characters often find salvation by turning to Christ. A
church scene is de rigueur in a Nollywood film. This is hardly
surprising. Christianity is on the rise in Africa. The number of evangelicals
has grown from some 17m four decades ago to more than 400m. In countries like
Liberia and Zambia, Nigerian “owner-operated” churches preach the gospel. Many
Nollywood stars are born-again Christians. Film credits usually end with the
invocation: “To God Be the Glory”. Helen Ukpabio, who is a leading producer as
well as a successful preacher, runs a decidedly religious production company
called Liberty Films. “All the movies from our stable are means of spreading
the gospel in preparation of rapture,” she explains.
Nigeria's success in film-making has not just elicited carping from
other African countries. It has fired their competitive instincts. South
Africa, Tanzania and Cameroon are now producing hundreds of films a year. Kenya
is beating Nigeria at its own awards ceremonies. Ghana and Liberia have
christened their nascent dream factories “Ghallywood” and “Lolliwood”. They are
rapidly winning back viewers in what has become a fiercely competitive market.
“We hide no longer. We face the fight,” says John Dumelo, a Ghanaian star whose
grin can be seen on posters across Accra, the capital.
Nollywood has been forced to raise its game in response. It has started
making films outside Lagos to cut costs, mirroring the exodus of film-making
from Los Angeles to cities like Toronto and Albuquerque—a process known as
“runaway production”. Some producers are investing in better equipment. Others
are trying to get their films onto the big screen. With a population of 15m,
Lagos has just three working cinemas. But that number could soon rise to 30.
“To bring in much-needed investors, the industry has to have physical assets,”
says a banker.
Nollywood is also distributing its wares more widely. African diasporas
in the West pay good money to see films from home. BSkyB, a British satellite
broadcaster, and Odeon, a cinema chain, both show Nollywood classics.
Consumer-goods companies offer sponsorship deals. “How much the industry has
changed,” marvels Emeka Duru, a veteran Lagos producer. “Not long ago actors
had to wear their own clothes on shoots.”
Film is now Africa's dominant medium, replacing music and dance. It
links distant societies, fosters the exchange of ideas and drives fashion
trends. In Kenya, Nollywood has bred a taste for traditional Nigerian clothing.
The prime minister, Raila Odinga, has been seen wearing a loosely flowing agbada
in parliament.
The power of images
Film also profoundly shapes how Africans see their own continent. Few
have access to news channels. They derive many of their opinions on
neighbouring countries from the movies. More than once your correspondent has
heard Africans say they had not been to such-and-such a place but knew it from
a film. That the films they watch are made by other Africans is a source of
considerable satisfaction. For decades many Africans have complained that the
Western media misrepresent their continent, showing only calamities like war,
disease, corruption and famine. They have come to see film as an antidote.
“Nollywood is the voice of Africa, the answer to CNN,” says Lancelot Imasuen,
one of the best-known Nigerian directors.
And African films are becoming more adventurous. “Somewhere in Africa,”
a Nigerian-Ghanaian co-production to be released next year, charts the rise and
fall of a fictitious military dictator. It is based on the life stories of Idi
Amin, Charles Taylor and Sani Abacha, who respectively ruled Uganda, Liberia
and Nigeria. Another recent film, “The President Must Not Die”, portrays a
decent head of state who faces assassination, an occurrence still common in
Africa yet rarely reported in state-controlled media. Political violence
remains a taboo subject in many countries. Nollywood is tackling it with zest
and flair.
Other Africans may complain about the cultural infiltration of their
countries. But Nollywood is no modern-day colonialist. Nigerian films are made
by private individuals who do not receive government funds. They are
distributed by small companies who must overcome official barriers to trade.
And they are bought by consenting (indeed, highly enthusiastic) consumers. As
Irving Kristol, a conservative American commentator who died in 2009, said of
Hollywood's international success: “It happened because the world wanted it to
happen.”
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