Sowetan

Nigerian film sector reeling

Thousands of jobs under threat

- AFP

Lagos – As coronaviru­s closed businesses around the world and forced billions to stay home, Nigerian director Obi Emelonye came up with an innovative way to keep filming.

Inspired by his wife’s teleconfer­encing calls from their isolation in Britain, he wrote and put together a short feature about a couple separated between London and Lagos.

There was just one day for rehearsals and two for filming, and relatives shot the actors on mobile phones in their homes on two continents.

“I said to myself, ‘What if I shoot a film remotely? I can direct my actors and produce it from home, and the cost is zero,” the well-known 53-yearold director said. “I wanted to show young people that despite the countless difficulti­es of our profession, despite the coronaviru­s, you can make a film without funding, without even a real camera.”

Inventiven­ess has always been a hallmark of Nigeria’s Nollywood – the second most prolific film industry on the planet – as it has risen from shaky homemade movies to slickly produced blockbuste­rs.

But now, in the face of the coronaviru­s crisis that has seen social distancing rules shut down shoots and cinemas closed, the sector has needed that spirit more than ever.

“We are an endangered species, we have to be innovative and to push the boundaries,” said Emelonye, whose short Heart 2 Heart was released for free on YouTube last month. “Things are very bad? You can make them better!”

The Nigerian film industry is riddled with contradict­ions.

On the surface are the red carpets, glitz and glamorous stars with millions of Instagram followers.

But underneath, much of the sector is poorly funded, salaries are miserly and rampant piracy robs it of crucial revenues. The arrival of the virus has dealt a major blow just as producers try to focus on higher-quality movies, cinema audiences grow and giants like Netflix push to tap into the country of 200-million, the most populous in Africa.

Moses Babatope watched in dismay as a government order to close saw income evaporate over the past three months at the Filmhouse, a cinema chain he co-founded in 2012.

“We’ve been through other difficult times, but this crisis is even worse,” he said.

Babatope estimated losses for the sector had reached over $9m (R152m) so far due to the virus. Dozens of film shoots have been put on hold or scrapped and the legion of workers in the industry – from make-up artists to technician­s to ushers – are going unpaid.

Netflix suspended the filming of its first original series made in Nigeria and French media giant Vivendi has delayed the opening of its first cinema in the capital Abuja. Distributo­rs reckon some 50,000 jobs are under threat.

Producer Charles Okpaleke teamed up with two local cinema chains to launch open-air “Drive-in” facilities. A first screening in Abuja in late May saw all tickets sell out in just a few hours as viewers flocked to watch his film Living in Bondage from their own cars. “Covid forces us to rethink our habits, but it is also an opportunit­y to try new experience­s.”

And even up-and-coming industry hopefuls were given the opportunit­y to keep on honing their skills. French start-up LAFAAC partnered with cinema school Femis and Nigerian television channel Wazobia to offer online training to would-be scriptwrit­ers via a mobile app. –

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