ABSTRACT
What is generally known today as Nollywood industry began around 1992 when Kenneth Nnebue shot Living in Bondage. The industry has since passed through a series of revolution with recognisable growth in out put. Today it has grown to become the world’s second largest producer of films ahead of Hollywood, generating millions of Dollars to the Nation’s economy. There is however the claim that the growth of the industry is not qualitative but quantitative. The hijack of the industry by amateurs have been partly blamed for the poor quality out put of the movies. It is in this light that Udomisor and Opara Anayo said that despite Nollywood’s success in home videos and across films produced in Africa, more has to be done in terms of production, film content, quality and originality (9). Poor finances have also been blamed for the low quality out put of movies made in Nigeria. It is in response to the general poor rating and the feeling that the Nollywood industry is about amateurish practice that this research is embarked upon. The idea is to direct attention to the fact that in spite of these challenges, Nollywood filmmakers still produce quality films. Three Nollywood movies have been selected for analysis to prove this. The films are The Figurine (2009), Phone Swap (2012) and Half of a Yellow Sun (2013). The analysis is in the area of Camera manipulation, lighting and shadow, sound recording, continuity, acting, speech and costume and make-up. The research methodology relied on are the Historical research methodology, the Sociological methodology and the Artistic methodology. The preference for these research methodologies is their suitability for theatre and media researches.
CHAPTER ONE
GENERAL INTRODUCTION
1.0 Background
The process of film making can be cumbersome, the person who is involved not withstanding. To a novice or a professional, the complexities in film production are always there from preproduction stage (the scripting of the story, identifying the talents, assembling the crew and scheduling the shoot), through the production phase which entails camera and light manipulation, audio management and the actual shoot; to the post production stage of editing and special effects.
The process is all-absorbing and requires a good understanding of the workings of the different elements (technical and artistic) that overlap in the process of filmmaking. But it must be said that as cumbersome as this might be, the experience can be fascinating if the process is properly mastered.
Incidentally, many people with little or no formal training in the art and technique of filmmaking parade themselves as filmmakers. There is no doubt that some of them manage to produce a few movies here and there. And though they may be less- than-impressive in quality, the truth remains that many of such amateurs eventually quit for lack of creative and technical skill required to remain in the business of film production.
Filmmaking is arguably the most technical of all art forms. And as implicated earlier, it requires a broad based understanding of the art and technique of film production. In what can be described as a corroboratory statement to the above claim, Bruce Mamer states that:
In filmmaking, those who truly excel, whether as directors, cinematographers, editors, or other skilled crew members are both technically expert and creatively engaged. It…is counterproductive to separate these qualities in any discussion of filmmaking (xii)
The above assertion is apt because broadly speaking, the tendency has always been to divide the skills of filmmakers into two – ‘creative’ and ‘technical’ and Mamer’s position is to the effect that filmmakers who want to be successful must necessarily be professionals and this implies that such person(s) must have gone to a formal film training institution or have acquired enough skill through sustained apprenticeship over a period of time under a professional practitioner. Also commenting on professionalism as requisite for producing high quality film, Herbert Zettl posits that:
You can no longer rely solely on instinct when framing a shot or
adding music to your video track but must acquire the knowledge and the skill to select and apply on a regular basis those aesthetic elements that translate significant ideas into maximally effective messages (xxvii)
The import of Zettl’s comment to this study is tremendous. This is because there exists in Nollywood the challenge of activities of people merely driven by the desire to make quick money rather than professionalism. Since 1992 when Kenneth Nnebue shot what is generally agreed to be the first Nollywood movie, Living in Bondage many people, mostly amateurs have taken to film production in Nigeria. The result is that the industry is currently the world’s second largest producer of feature films, only behind
Bollywood of India, suggesting that it is ahead of America’s Hollywood. It must be the influx of these amateurs into the industry that is responsible for the churning out of movies at such astonishing rate. It may also be said that the activities of these invaders have given the industry a not too impressive rating when compared to other film cultures across the globe.
Drawing from the comments made by both Zettl and Mamer towards successful filming, it may be understood that practice in the Nollywood industry is not entirely professional, and that if the industry were to make any impact, something drastic has to be done. Care must be taken not to misconstrue this to mean that Nollywood is all about amateurism and instinctive shots. The point has to be made that there are Nollywood movies that are not so bad in their output in spite of the low budget for most film shoots in Nigeria.
Though the post 1992 influx of non professionals into the industry may be partly responsible for some of the set backs that filmmaking in Nigeria have suffered today, the problem of the industry dates back to 1969 when the first documentary film, One Nigeria was produced by Ola Balogun, a pioneer filmmaker in Nigeria. According to records, his effort at making good films was encumbered by all sorts of challenges ranging from the pecuniary to the technical. Similarly, it is on record that Kongi’s Harvest, Nigeria’s first feature film suffered the same fate.
It is also said that Ola Balogun managed to continue producing films until after his production of Money Power (Owo l’agba) in 1982 when he bowed out as a result of what he termed ‘exasperation’ resulting from the challenges earlier mentioned.
The fact is that even though the first generation filmmakers in Nigeria belonged to the era of analogue technology, filmmakers were nonetheless required to parade a
good understanding of the techniques required to manipulate and get good output from the analogue equipment. Unfortunately such technical know-how may not have been plenteous thereby leading to the kind of exasperation that Ola Balogun claimed to have forced him out of practice in 1982. But since Nnebue’s effort in 1992, the industry has passed through a series of development. For instance Nollywood films that were initially shot, edited and released on CD and VCD are today released on DVD format for theatrical exhibition and home viewing. There is also a shift from the early period when Nollywood films were solely sponsored by Igbo traders with the Government setting up the Nollywood capacity building Fund called project ACT- Nollywood with a budget of N3billion. These and more has propelled the growth of the industry into a huge money making venture that has employed thousands of people and generates around $200 million gross to the nation’s economy.
As already pointed out, the industry is adjudged the second best producer of films in the world. This growth is captured in Oladunjoye’s observation that in the past, as a Nigerian, if you travel abroad, people would ask if you had brought food and spices from home, but today they ask if you have brought any Nigerian film. In spite of all the attention that Nollywood has attracted to itself there are those who believe that it is plagued with the problem of low quality production. This belief is expressed by Israel Udomisor and Opara Anayo who argued that ‘Despite Nollywood success in home videos and across films produced in Africa, more has to be done in terms of production, film content, quality and originality’ (9)
On the other side of Udomisor and Opara Anayo’s thinking are those who are of the opinion that Nollywood ‘has arrived on the big stage’. Perhaps Nollywood can be said to have arrived on the big stage from the point of view of quantity and not quality of films that the industry produces, another group of thinkers would argue.
Biodun Jeyifo, in an article titled’ what is right and what is wrong with Nollywood?’ Wrote that ‘In terms of the technological and economic sources of its identity, Nollywood is actually a cottage industry that mistakes itself for a fully evolved, truly developed corporate or big business industry (11)
No matter the reservations that there might be to Jeyifo’s comment, it is weighty and suggests the need for attention to be turned to the creative, technical and aesthetic content of Nigerian made films. It also suggests the need to pay attention to pecuniary issues with a view to making it more competitive globally. In addition to such fears being expressed by the likes of Jeyifo, consumers make condemnable comments about Nollywood movies. However these consumers’ little understanding of film production technique like camera manipulation, lighting, audio and other technical elements for film making. As a result, their opinions come to nothing. What they bring to the table are comments limited to issues like predictable plot arrangements, poor storylines and preponderance of diabolism, poor sub-titling and other commonly addressed issues.
It may be said that the poor standard of most Nollywood films is connected to poor finances and non professional (technical and creative) handling of the movies. And these have far reaching consequences for the industry which has the potential to become world class if professionally managed.
In an article titled ‘The Context of Film Production in Nigeria: The Colonial Heritage,’ Onokome Okome draws attention to the problems that beset filmmaking in Nigeria, describing it as ‘nebulous’. He quoted Jonathan Haynes as saying that Nollywood film production is artisanal in output and very sporadic. Similarly Samyn Sophie talked about the problem of finance in Nollywood thus:
Film financing in Nollywood is mainly an independent venture. Budgets are small and largely derived from one’s own savings. But this is not the only way of financing filmmaking in Nollywood. Often the marketer pays for a film, and he or she gets the final cut and then distributes. In this sense, it is best to say that Nollywood films are financed on an ad hoc basis, which makes it lack the institutional structure that many film cultures have in Europe, America and Asia (110).
It is instructive to draw attention to the fact that so far mention has been made of the film process, its challenges and what it requires to succeed. A careful look shows a recurring reference to the term ‘professional’ in relation to film production which is used in contrast to ‘amateur’, another term that has found repetition in the study so far.
What this implies is that professionalism is core to film production. Unfortunately the film industry in Nigeria is run by a long list of amateurs who have hijacked the industry. This sad development has given birth to a filmmaking tradition that may be considered escapist and mediocre when tested against acceptable standard practice.
The art and technology of film was imported to Nigeria through colonialism around 1903 with the underlying motive of aiding and perpetuating the ambition of the imperialists. As a result, the film images then were far from the socio-cultural realities of the people of Nigeria. The images were those of white people doing things in very unfamiliar environments, removing the film world from the local world leading to a situation where the film reality is considered by the indigenous people as unreal, different and distinct from life; a development that is dangerous to filmmaking in
Nigeria. And this danger can be seen in the way that Nigerians, even of the 21st century,
deal with the content of films produced in the country. To them, most film images that they see in Nollywood movies are not the same as the realities of their social life.
According to Asobele ‘Our colonial masters exhibited films that presented their culture, and their superiority. The colonial masters imported films to propagate their interests, and give a make believe that portrays their rule and authority as the best (1)
It is instructive to say that ‘amateur’, as used in this study, is not limited to that person that is not knowledgeable in the art of filmmaking. The term is used to include those who have trained in theatre awarding institutions but cannot lay claim to being professionals because they lack the practical know-how of filmmaking due to the design of their film studies curriculum in school. It also includes those who may be knowledgeable in film production but due to constraints like that of finance decide to abandon professionalism for amateurism.
It may be said that the film has the way of telling its story and that it takes trained professionals who are grounded in its technicality and creative requirement to produce good films. It will also not be wrong to infer that though these professionals may abound in Nigeria there are yet a large number of Nollywood movies makers who are faced with numerous challenges that have made it difficult for them to realise the optimum visual and aural qualities that come together in the film medium.
1.1 Statement of Problem
It has been established that Nollywood is in the business of large scale commercial film production. Looking back from when it all started in 1992, it will be observed that the industry is more than twenty years old. It has grown to become the second to India’s Bollywood with respect to the quantity of films it turns out.
Unfortunately, Nollywood films do not enjoy good rating, both here at home and abroad.
Similarly, invasion by go-for-the-money filmmakers who turn the art of filmmaking into money spinning trade, as well as pecuniary challenges have been identified as common problems faced by the Nollywood industry. The point must however be made that there are prominent filmmakers in the industry who have refused to be sucked in by the easy money the invaders are making. These professionals have ensured that quality is not totally lost in the industry. According to Shimshenge and Agav, these professionals include Tunde Kelani (through his Mainstream film and Television production outfit) Teco Benson, Lancelot Imasuen, Emem Isong and Fidelis Duker whom they describe as ‘those who never gave up on supplying quality works’. (108) In spite of this truism, it has been observed that most research works carried out on Nollywood movies mostly border on the negative aspects of the industry thereby confining it to doom as it were. It is true that there are those aspects that need to be addressed for the industry to find its professional height. But those ingenuities of the industry that are making the industry tick today, and that are peculiar to it must not be neglected. Researchers must be seen to highlight the strength of the industry as well.
The problem emanating from this will be that though Nollywood has done ingeniously well to come this far, there is the feeling that it has remained largely trapped in uninspiring filmmaking techniques and that if stakeholders do not find ways of making the industry more attuned to globally acceptable standards of filmmaking, the industry will collapse. It is with this kind of mindset that Abiodun Olayiwola said that:
The film industry in Nigeria is left in the thick wilderness of survival as it battles with the difficulty of maintaining its own in a world that is gradually shrinking into McLuhan’s global village (319)
It is as a consequence therefore that this research, bordering on technique and artistry, is embarked on to help direct attention to the true state and quality of Nollywood films.
1.2 Research Question
Each research concern poses its own question(s), the one(s) that the researcher sets out to answer. The following are the questions that this research work is looking to deal with:
What are the technical, aesthetic and artistic states of Nollywood Movies?
How has the invasion of the industry by non professionals affected the
Nollywood industry?
How professional and ethical are Nollywood filmmakers?
To what extent do Nollywood filmmakers adhere to ethical prescriptions by the films and video censors board?
There is also the question of whether or not films produced in Nigeria (Nollywood) can favourably compete with the more developed film traditions of America, Europe and Asia.
1.3 Objectives of the Study
It is a known fact that the western action adventures and Bollywood musicals do not provide enough film content that is relevant to the worldview of Africans generally
and Nigerians particularly. And since Nollywood has grown to become the largest, and by implication the most far-reaching film industry in Africa, it is being relied on to provide an alternative film image tradition that Africans can relate with directly. But as it is today, there are doubts being expressed by people of Nollywood’s capacity to achieve this. This doubt is premised on the industry’s amateurish approach to filmmaking, a trend feared to be capable of entrenching itself as a film tradition different from what obtains in other film traditions.
Nollywood may parade familiar settings and plot that Africans understand and confront daily but its critics think that there is the question of audio-visual quality that engenders sustainability of interest and continuous acceptability by consumers. For this reason, they claim that the appetite of Africans and Nigerians for foreign movies is beginning to return again thereby threatening the continued existence of Nollywood movies.
As a consequence, the objective of this research is to explore the technical, creative and aesthetic components of select Nollywood movies with the ultimate intention of knowing the strength and weaknesses of the industry. The idea is to draw the attention of film scholars and filmmakers in Nigeria to the growth and development of the industry. This will be achieved by leveraging on theories and practices that are known to drive the film industry globally.
Consequently, it is the hope of this researcher that the community of filmmakers in Nigeria, including the academics whose job is to train the filmmakers, will not only be pointed to areas where there are rooms for improvement but will also leverage on the content of the research work to take the movie industry in Nigeria to another level, thereby making it a global competitor.
The point must be made that, except for those who had the privilege to study abroad, most Nollywood filmmakers are products of theatre Arts and related departments in Nigerian institutions of higher learning. The Departments of theatre Arts are hardly equipped with enough resources to teach film in most of our institutions. As a consequence, what graduates of these institutions end up with is usually not sufficient for them to practice in the field. It is therefore one of the objectives of this work to challenge these Departments to key into best global training traditions by restructuring their curricula for the purpose of enhancing the performance of their graduates in this very challenging vocation of filmmaking.
This researcher believes that the proper training of theatre graduates will be a big step towards correcting most of the problems faced by the film industry in Nigeria, the truth being that the amateurs will be forced to vacate the scene if well trained professionals begin to produce quality movies. The competitiveness of the market will naturally put them out of business. This work therefore seeks to explore ways of calling attention to the problems of the Nollywood, using three selected movies as case study.
By the end of this research, the following objectives will hopefully be achieved:
That there will be a reconsideration of the notion that the Nollywood industry is only associated with low quality products.
It is expected that in spite of the amateurish approach to most films produced in the industry, the research shall establish that Nollywood is an emerging force in the global film industry.
It is the hope of the researcher that the challenges of the industry thrown up by the research will encourage professional filmmakers in Nigeria to reclaim their professional space from amateurs whose penchant to make
brisk money is responsible for the poor quality and rating of Nollywood films.
At the end it is hoped that Nollywood filmmakers will come to terms with film’s potential to shape the culture of its people and therefore see the constant need to respect the ethical prescriptions by the Nigerian Films and Videos Censors Board (NFVCB).
1.4 Significance of the Study
It is true that since Living in Bondage was produced by Kenneth Nnebue in
1992 the film industry in Nigeria has come under criticism by both professionals and non professionals alike. It is also true that most of the issues this work seeks to tackle have been mentioned one way or the other by some of these critics. But the one thing that this study seeks to approach differently is that unlike the usual concentration on plot arrangement, storyline, socio-cultural relevance and the pecuniary challenges, the work looks to concern itself with technical and creative components of filming in Nollywood. This involves a study of deeper technical issues like camera angle shots, lighting and audio qualities, as well as other elements that overlap in the Nollywood film production process.
It is pertinent to say that a look at the more technical components of the art of filmmaking is very imperative, especially as we are in the 21st century, an age when all media of communication are in dire contest for relevance.
It is from the above that the study derives its significance. The study brings to the fore important aspects of filmmaking which hitherto receive little or no attention. By directing attention to these important aspects of filmmaking, stakeholders in the
Nigerian film industry will be encouraged to work towards improving the technical, artistic and aesthetic quality of their movies to meet international standards.
More than anything else, and as implicated in the research question, issues of technique, artistry and aesthetic are core to the challenges faced by the movie industry in Nigeria. They are largely responsible for the low rating of Nollywood movies. Because this research study borders on the technical and aesthetic component Nigerian made films, it will go a long way in helping to address the different issues attendant on such technical and creative fields in the industry.
1.5 Scope of the Study
The study is not a comparative work and so does not dabble into comparing particular film cultures like the American Hollywood or India’s Bollywood to films that are produced in Nigerian. Instead, it explores the film production techniques (both creative and technical) of films made in Nigeria in the light of standards that are considered professional globally. And though there are films made in Nigeria that can be said to be good enough, especially those shot in celluloid by the like of Ola Balogun in the years preceding the Nollywood tradition, such films are not of interest to this work. The target is those films produced in the Nollywood tradition of digital video production. What this means is that films produced earlier than 1992, especially those shot on celluloid by the arguably more-trained old brigade of Nigerian filmmakers are not within the purview of this study.
Of course it must be understood that the film industry in Nigeria can be broadly studied along two lines of divide – the one is of the era preceding 1992, which was principally driven by analogue film technology and the other belong to the period from
1992 to date, which has come to be known as Nollywood and driven by the digital video technology.
The work covers the Nollywood movies alone. The three films that are to be studied and analysed are strictly those produced and directed by Nigerian filmmakers. By this token the three selected movies for analysis in this study – Phone Swap as directed by Kunle Afolayan ‘Half of a Yellow Sun’ as directed by Biyi Bandele and The Figurine as directed by Kunle Afolayan are treated as made in Nigeria films. These movies tell Nigerian stories and are produced and directed by professional Nigerian filmmakers in the Nollywood film tradition. Broadly, the study covers professionalism in film production in Nigeria. Closely related to professionalism is the issue of ethics and censorship in Nollywood film production.
The following films are examined:
1. The Figurine (2009) as directed by Kunle Afolayan
2. Half of a Yellow Sun (2013) as directed by Biyi Bandele
3. Phone Swap (2012) as directed by Kunle Afolayan
1.6 Limitation of the Study
Though materials abound in film and film related topics, it must be said that materials on professionalism in filmmaking and those on ethics are not common on library shelves. As a result, the internet provided an option which was explored but to very little effect. Book sites that were visited with the aim to download related books turned out to be of little help as well. Different search engines were also leveraged on for anything that might be of help. A few help came from there but not as much as required to deal with the research interest in the manner intended. The other problem
that is associated with internet sources happens to be their reliability. Not many scholars consider internet sources reliable enough for serious academic research.
Similarly, the books readily available are those written by foreign authors. As helpful as such works were to the research, they hardly make comments contemporaneous to professionalism, aesthetics and ethics in the Nollywood industry. As a consequence, Journal articles written by Nigerian scholars on the Nollywood were mostly relied on for the review of related literature.
1.7 Research Methodology
Every research involves the collation of necessary data for the purpose of analysis in order to arrive at answer(s) to the questions raised by the researcher and attend to the problem statement of the study. To this end, many theatre research methods are available for the researcher to explore. For this work, the researcher is relying on the tools of the following theatre arts research techniques for collation of its data: the Historical, Sociological and Artistic methodologies.
1.8.1 The Historical Research Methodology
According to Sam Ukala the historical research methodology ‘entails the investigation of documented sources such as books, journals, reports, films, video and audio tapes, archival material, archaeological excavations, artefacts…as well as oral sources’ (12).
He goes on to describe the function of the Historical methodology of data collation in theatre arts as helping to trace the beginning and development of people, institutions and things. Because this research, in part entails establishing historical facts about the film industry in Nigeria and accounting for the beginning and development of the Nollywood tradition, both of which can be collated from documented sources, the researcher found the Historical method useful.
The study is interested not only in the historical past of Nollywood but also in generating ideas on the present state of the industry and the films it produces. As a result the researcher finds the historical methodology indispensable. The usefulness of this technique to the research study is better be appreciated considering Nwabueze’s claim that the technique ‘…investigates, experiments, evaluates, discovers, recalls, analyze and reconstructs past trends, attitudes, achievements and facts in order to refresh the memory, proffer new dimension to an issue, clarify current problems, discover new knowledge or interpret existing ones in fresh perspective. To a large extent this study also explores historical documents on film (particularly Nollywood), and through the evaluation of such historical documents, discover current developments in Nollywwood with a view to suggesting perspectives that will help improve filmmaking practice in Nigeria. Materials on film generally and film in Nigeria, particularly movies of the Nollywood tradition are sourced from documented sources like books and journals of theatre arts extracted from libraries and the internet for the study.
1.8.2 The Sociological Research Methodology
According to Sam Ukala one of the techniques of gathering data in the Sociological research methodology is interaction with recording on video or audio tapes. This makes it suitable for research studies that are media related. Of course this research study titled Professionalism and Ethics in Film production: a critique of technical and aesthetic elements in selected Nollywood Films is without doubt media
oriented. And since it requires watching and analysing a number of Nollywood movies, the researcher finds the Sociological research methodology suitable for the study.
The function of the Sociological research methodology is to describe, expose and establish the causes and effects of existing facts or situation with a view to making suggestions towards its maintenance, improvement or discouragement. This aptly captures the process of the research being embarked upon.
1.8.3 The Artistic Research Methodology
The Artistic research methodology allows for reliance on intuition, inspiration and imagination which theatre artists and scholars are known to be involved with most of the times. It is a method for artistic creation and interpretation which includes, but not limited to, developing a model for writing for the screen, designing and building costume, designing and executing light or sound plot, directing for the screen etc.
According to Sam Ukala this methodology is subjective and may even be speculative. Therefore the thesis to be produced with the Artistic methodology must have sufficient support of existing theories and practice for it to be recognised or accepted. And this aligns perfectly with the researcher’s intention to interpret and identify the problems that the Nollywood films have and to suggest ways of making them better.
This material content is developed to serve as a GUIDE for students to conduct academic research
PROFESSIONALISM AND ETHICS IN FILM PRODUCTION A CRITIQUE OF TECHNICAL AND AESTHETIC ELEMENTS IN SELECTED NOLLYWOOD FILMS>
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