This Is Nollywood

This Is Nollywood is a 2007 Nigerian documentary film by Franco Sacchi and Robert Caputo, detailing the Nigerian film industry, much along the same lines as the acclaimed 2007 documentary Welcome to Nollywood by Jamie Meltzer

This is Nollywood
Director Bond Emeruwa and crew shoot a scene
Directed byFranco Sacchi
Produced byCargo Film & Releasing
Music byAlan Perez Ted Corrigan Antibalas
CinematographyFranco Sacchi Robert Caputo
Edited byFranco Sacchi
Release date
  • 2007 (2007)
Running time
55 minutes
CountryUnited States

Through the story of director Bond Emeruwa, this documentary tells the story of a $250 million industry that has created thousands of jobs. As the documentary follows Emeruwa's production of Check Point, various members of the Nigerian filmmaking community discuss their industry, defend the types of films they make and the impact they have, and describe common difficulties they encounter, from hectic shooting schedules to losing electricity mid-shoot.[1]

Synopsis

This is Nollywood follows Nigerian director Bond Emeruwa on his quest to finish filming a feature-length action movie in nine days on the outskirts of Lagos. However, Bond is just one of the incredible protagonists of Nollywood, Nigeria’s burgeoning, but little known movie industry that is rapidly changing Africa's modern popular culture. In the end, the film is about more than a fascinating and unheralded movie industry, it is about how people surmount obstacles to achieve their dreams.

Awards

  • Festival Internacional de Abuja 2007
gollark: They have slightly less money.
gollark: I don't really support that for its *own* sake, but this is hilarious.
gollark: Hmm, 15% CPU, I think gitea is synchronizing things.
gollark: Well, they make the shortsellers worse off.
gollark: osmarks.net doesn't run at more than ~5% CPU so I don't really care.

See also

References

  1. "Official Website". Retrieved 14 January 2010.


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