NIGERIAN HOME VIDEOS
(Programme
of the 25th Festival of the 3 Continents, November 2003)
In
the early 90s, a rapidly increasing number of films started to be made
on video and distributed on VHS cassettes or VCD. In less than ten years,
while the Nigerian film industry had disappeared (no theatres, no films),
Nigeria produced several hundreds fiction videos a year. These were
often cheap productions expected to make quick profit. Aimed at the
domestic market (Nigeria is the most populated African country with
120 million inhabitants), these videos are also increasingly exported
all over Africa and within the Nigerian diaspora. Commercial success
and guaranteed profit were such that production became so excessive
that, at the beginning of 2002, producers decided to stop production
for three months to make the market healthier. Today two to three thousand
films a year are made.
Mass-produced
fiction films and some major figures
Funded
mostly by distributors, ignored by international coproduction and television,
Nigerian videos are definitely commercial genre films with a wide variety
of influences, from Brazilian telenovelas to Indian and Hong Kong films.
Production conditions are often very poor: a few days shooting, uncreative
filming, outdated special effects, non-professional actors... Stories
are just as basic: extra-marital affairs, violence, magic.
Yet there's an energy that sometimes could be related to early Hollywood.
This strand has a few films which cleverly mix story-telling and a reflection
on the Nigerian reality. Tunde Kelani's "Thunderbolt", for
example, is a vivid chronicle with a remarkable actress.
A new future for African cinema could grow from this nascent industry
with a unique strength compared to the rest of the world.
Thunderbolt
- Tunde Kelani - 2001
Hostages
1 et 2 - Tade Odigan - 1997
The
Adulteress - Simisela Opeluwa - 2003
White
Handkerchief - Tunde Kelani - 2000
A
place called home - Mahmood Ali-Balogun - 1998
Twins
of the rain forest - Odion P. Agboh - 1998
Something
Else - Seke Somulu - 2003