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Nairaland Forum / Entertainment / Celebrities / Desmond Elliot: Why I Hid My Yoruba Identity From Nollywood (78991 Views)
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Re: Desmond Elliot: Why I Hid My Yoruba Identity From Nollywood by londoner: 9:58am On Oct 25, 2015 |
macof: Yes he is a great producer and director but how many careers have been created and maintained by his films? The people he has featured in those films have come up through Igbo led Nollywood and made their name and fanbase there? This does not take away from Kunle at all but he did not build an industry or acting careers of an industry. It is Igbo led Nollywood that saw interest from CNN on Nigerian movies and Africans from all over buying vcd's and recognising actors and actresses of Nigerian extraction. Those movies may have been rudimentary and may not have cost millions of dollars but they captured Africa and even the Caribbean. That was the effort in of a number of filmmakers, marketers and distribution outfits who were from the SE. They also had the insight to include non-Igbos and non Nigerians to act. Half of a yellow sun is based on the book which is written by an Igbo woman which meant basically a ready made story and characters. 2 Likes 1 Share |
Re: Desmond Elliot: Why I Hid My Yoruba Identity From Nollywood by STILESGANG: 10:04am On Oct 25, 2015 |
londoner:Yeah I know but except for the storyline there is little or contribution of any ibo man to the success of the movie.It's like black americans making claims for the success of django unchained or 12 years a slave all because the storyline was about their history |
Re: Desmond Elliot: Why I Hid My Yoruba Identity From Nollywood by STILESGANG: 10:11am On Oct 25, 2015 |
londoner:Madam,the only reason psquare stop releasing songs frequently is because they saw that their songs are not making so much impact like before they can't compete the young yoruba boys |
Re: Desmond Elliot: Why I Hid My Yoruba Identity From Nollywood by macof(m): 8:08pm On Oct 25, 2015 |
londoner: . . I even thought you were a sensible Igbo fellow. you Igbos are so shameless and disgraceful... how you lie so comfortably not only that but u love to show ur utter ignorance everywhere... Kunle afolayan, Femi Adebayo, Kehinde Bankole all started with Yoruba movies. Bimbo Manuel picked fame with appearance in Tango with me ( a movie I'll start calling 'Yoruba movie' since any movie with an igbo dominated cast and crew is called "Igbo movie" and everyone of you feel OK with it, I see no reason why can't call "Tango with me" a Yoruba movie) and the TV series "Tinsel" (a Yoruba series, since the cast and crew is dominated by Yorubas) Deola Sagoe began her acting career with the movie, and she did a damn good job playing the iconic Funmilayo Ransome-Kuti Igbos are losers in filmmaking, normal human beings know that In Filmmaking Quality comes before Quantity but to an Igbo man lacking in common sense, Quantity comes first 2 Likes 3 Shares |
Re: Desmond Elliot: Why I Hid My Yoruba Identity From Nollywood by Nobody: 9:11pm On Oct 25, 2015 |
What culture are those movies showcasing? Igbo or yorouba, since its portraying Igbo culture, then Its Igbo, remember when forme pres goodluck was in gambia, immediately they saw him,the crowd started shouting Igweeeee and not oba, thats how far our culture has gone, all the major actors they know are Igbos, can yougive me Genevieve, Rita, Stephnie Okereke, Uchejumbo, Jim Iyke, Pete Edochie, Blossom, OCJ Ukeje etc alternatives in yoruba movies etc we havebuilt nollywood bro,no amount of propaganda can change it macof: 3 Likes |
Re: Desmond Elliot: Why I Hid My Yoruba Identity From Nollywood by londoner: 1:39am On Oct 27, 2015 |
macof: Let me repeat In talking about Nollywood and not just individual films. You actually proved my point. How many of the actors or actresses you listed are not Yoruba? Igbo led Nollywood made careers of many and actually took most of Africa with it you can see Nigerians of many tribes and also Ghanaians that made it through Igbo led Hollywood and are household names because of it. It is actually those movies that Africans all over the continent identified with they took the actors as their own whether they were Igbo, Yoruba or Calabar. I don't get why you are trying to deny that. It's fact. You did not see me mention any Igbo director or producer or anything about cast and crew.....Nollywood is an industry that's why. The careers of those that have gone through it is testament to that. Just because it was not Yoruba led should not cause an issue in you. Also of the people you mentioned it is only Kunle I have really heard of. 2 Likes |
Re: Desmond Elliot: Why I Hid My Yoruba Identity From Nollywood by bigfrancis21: 10:28am On Oct 27, 2015 |
DikeOha882: Not only in Gambia, Jonathan was also hailed 'Igwe' by the people of Namibia when he visited Namibia last year. The effects of Igbo-led Nollywood is indeed far-reaching. Even all the way to the Caribbean. My haitian co-worker knows Igbo words like, 'Igwe', 'Nna anyi' etc. President Goodluck Jonathan rounded up his state visit to Namibia yesterday where he was conferred with “Order of Welwitschia”, the Namibia highest national honour, by President Hifikepunye Pohamba.http://www.talkofnaija.com/politics/people-of-namibia-hail-jonathan-igwe 1 Like |
Re: Desmond Elliot: Why I Hid My Yoruba Identity From Nollywood by macof(m): 3:14pm On Oct 27, 2015 |
londoner: Still on this? I asked bigfrancis21 before to mention those works that have made igbo own Nollywood such that the contribution of non igbos becomes insignificant as you want the world to believe. .. Nollywood is an industry that produces movies. . How do you talk about Nollywood without talking about individual movies? See where insincerity is taking you too? After I proved that movies with Igbo dominated cast and crew are of low quality compared to that of non igbos Wtf! You still claiming those names above owe their careers to igbos? Wtf!! Are you really this dumb? So Femi Adebayo owes his appearances in yoruba movies like Jelili to Igbos? Pls mention the names of the Igbos who contributed to his career? It's one thing to claim and another to prove it You disgusting fellows want to claim Ghanaians too . Ghanaians who contribute to Nollywood Igbos created careers of majid Michel, Nadia Buhari, Jackie Appiah These folks made their careers in their countries and I must say, Ghanaian movies are of better quality than the Igbo dominated movies in nigeria. . Of course you cannot mention any movie from an igbo producer with a dominated igbo cast because there are non of worth. You keep screaming igbo led Nollywood due to Quantity and the general position of Nigeria in Africa.. . Of all the movies igbo producers make you cannot mention any one of quality, anyone in the standard of the ones made by Lancelot Imasuen or Charles Novia. When you say Igbos created careers pls with which movie? Tell us the Igbo movie that created the career of anyone. That's how it is in Hollywood, when we speak of Will Smith we remember his appearance in the TV show Fresh Prince of Bel-Air, we speak Shai LaBeouf we speak of his appearances in the Transformers. So if you cannot name such movies then you have nothing to say, cus Nollywood is owned by all Nigeria - Igbos, Edos, Yoruba, Efik-Ibibio are giving significant contributions. It's only foolish igbos like yourself that claim Igbos lead or own nollywood, especially when the best movies in Nollywood are attached to non igbo personalities You watch a movie today you forget it's title tomorrow... is that what you say you give Nollywood to own it? 3 Likes 3 Shares |
Re: Desmond Elliot: Why I Hid My Yoruba Identity From Nollywood by bigfrancis21: 3:29pm On Oct 27, 2015 |
NoIgwegbe: To add to the list: Dickson Iroegbu Okey Ezugwu Teco Benson (from Ojoto, Anambra state) 1 Like |
Re: Desmond Elliot: Why I Hid My Yoruba Identity From Nollywood by macof(m): 3:39pm On Oct 27, 2015 |
DikeOha882: you call what those movies portray as igbo culture? A man killing his brother for his wealth, a demonic woman destroying a peaceful marriage? Or an evil village woman This is what we see in those types of movies with poor script. One would expect igbo filmmakers to expose the beauty of Igbo culture to the world and not make silly storylines that no cultural or educational significance Mr. Man Sharap Omotola, Ramsey Nouah, Joke Silver, Olu Jacob are more popular than most of the people you mention there yoruba built media in nigeria. . Deal with it. We introduced you forest dwellers to media technology 3 Likes 1 Share |
Re: Desmond Elliot: Why I Hid My Yoruba Identity From Nollywood by bigfrancis21: 3:42pm On Oct 27, 2015 |
INTRODUCTION The Nigerian Home Video Industry, popularly referred to as “Nollywood”, during its blossoming epoch, soared on the wings of dynamism, assiduity, imperturbability, resilience, and was with certitude propelled by the wind of change into enviable heights of Moviedom. Despite the threatening thunderbolt missiles of mediocrity, ineptitude, charlatan craze, and shoe string budgets culminating into an endless stream of flawed productions launched at it by life's anti- progressive synchronized network, in a bid to terminate its meteoric ascension, Nollywood nonetheless survived the epic battle. ... Nollywood's net worth as at 2008 stood between an estimated $250 and $300 Million dollars.1 It is worthy of note that a Global cinema survey, conducted in 2006 by the UNESCO Institute for Statistics (UIS) and released sometime in May 2009, puts Nollywood on the number two spot, behind Bollywood and ahead of Hollywood based on the numerical data of the movies produced. However, it is an indubitable fact that despite the set back to the third position, Hollywood still blazes the trail as the foremost Movie Industry with a pedigree of top class, matchless, quality productions. The annals of the Nigerian movie Industry, proudly boasts of a plethora of movies encapsulating the Celluloid formatted films of yester years and the stream of Home Video productions, with the former incontrovertibly acting as the foundation upon which the latter was built. NOLLYWOOD - THE ORIGIN Film exhibition began to thrive during the Colonial era, with Glover Memorial Hall playing host to a range of memorable films viewed by “potential Nigerians”, in August 1903. However, the non-availability of proper records reflecting the title of the debut film exhibited has created a lapse in the precedent stock. Notwithstanding the lacuna, the way had been paved for the exhibition of more foreign films at the Hall and other designated venues. ... “The Yoruba Travelling Theatre Group” of the 60's and 70's can be referred to as the “Fountain Head” of movie productions in Nigeria. The veterans with great Theatrical skills and great performances took their works beyond the stage, and dove into the sea of film productions using the Celluloid format. Notable film makers on the Roll call of Honour during the Celluloid boom era of the 70's include Ola Balogun, Eddie Ugbomah, late Herbert Ogunde, Adeyemi Afolayan a.k.a Ade Love (father of Kunle Afolayan of the Irapada fame), Ladi Ladebo, Moses Adejumo, Adebayo Salami and Afolabi Adesanya.3 The list of documented films produced during the 70's era and transcending somewhat into the 80's is simply astonishing and goes to show that the Movie Industry has been around much longer, contrary to the '1992 belief syndrome' most have been injected with . Such works include Kongi Harvest (1971), Alpha (1972), Bull Frog in the Sun (1974), Amadi (1975), Ajani Ogun (1975), Muzik Man (1976), Bisi, Daughter of the River (1977), Ija Ominira (1978), Aiye (1979), Kadara (1980), Jaiyesimi (1980) Efunsetan Aniwura (1981), Cry Freedom (1981),Ija Orogun (1982) Owo L'Agba (1982)4 The cost of producing films in that era was financially back breaking, with Nigerians further frustrating the efforts of the filmmakers by opting to watch films of occidental and oriental origin at the Cinemas and Exhibition centres, rather than the locally produced ones. The Cowboy films were exhilarating to watch while the Chinese films paraded amongst others, the Legendary “Bruce Lee” in (Lo Wei's, The Big Boss (1971), Fist of Fury (1972), Way of the Dragon (1972), Enter the Dragon (1973), The Game of Death released in 1978) who exhibited Martial Arts dexterity, obviously a fighting technique alien, yet fascinating to us at that time. ... THE GOOD - The Ascension Flight Home Videos were produced which served as an alternative to the cinemas, and the name naturally stems from the fact that you could seat within the comfort of your home and watch the movies produced in the VHS format via your VCR. Film Makers capitalized on the gains of the Home Video concept offered, and began producing movies using the Yoruba language as the means of communication. However, the year “1992” has overtime been widely accepted as the triggering period of Home Video productions, with Ken Nnebue's “Living in Bondage” said to be the first movie made for commercial purposes using the Igbo/English language. The movie no doubt struck the “Movie Well”, which invoked a mass exodus of people from other spheres into the art of movie productions, having seen the opportunities that lay in the Gold mine region. Thus, did the Home Video Industry tagged “Nollywood” emerge. Read more at: http://www.modernghana.com/moviep/5508/3/pagenum/nollywood-origin-and-unresolved-problems-by-august.html 1 Like |
Re: Desmond Elliot: Why I Hid My Yoruba Identity From Nollywood by bigfrancis21: 3:44pm On Oct 27, 2015 |
So far, I am yet to see any credible source reference the ownership or origin of Nollywood to the South-West region, other than online clowns living out palpable fantasies on nairaland. International and national sources on the origin of Nollywood all point to the South East. 2 Likes 1 Share |
Re: Desmond Elliot: Why I Hid My Yoruba Identity From Nollywood by macof(m): 3:52pm On Oct 27, 2015 |
bigfrancis21: And this is what? Ur proof that Igbos own nollywood? Are you serious? Did you not read where ur article stated that Yoruba groups began filmmaking in nigeria? Nollywood's revenue includes all movies produced from Nigeria. . Not just the movies produced by Igbos. .. I hope you know that much? 2 Likes |
Re: Desmond Elliot: Why I Hid My Yoruba Identity From Nollywood by macof(m): 3:54pm On Oct 27, 2015 |
bigfrancis21: Gladly, I can say I never claimed Nollywood is owned by Yorubas. . I'm against the bigoted notion that Nollywood is owned by Igbos If you don't get this then you have a serious problem. . But I knew that already 2 Likes |
Re: Desmond Elliot: Why I Hid My Yoruba Identity From Nollywood by bigfrancis21: 4:00pm On Oct 27, 2015 |
macof: bigfrancis21: 1 Like |
Re: Desmond Elliot: Why I Hid My Yoruba Identity From Nollywood by bigfrancis21: 4:24pm On Oct 27, 2015 |
macof: You keep missing the point over and over again. I have told you severally that Yorubas started filmmaking in Nigeria but they were mostly into theatrical plays shown in cinemas which were costly. Yorubas were never into movie production in tapes, VCR, DVDS/CDs etc., being another aspect entirely. Film making covers several aspects such as theatrical plays, movie production etc. Before Living in Bondage, Kenneth Nnabue had tried sponsoring several commercials in Yoruba language but they were not financially profitable. Then he released Living in Bondage, an Igbo-language movie that was purely in celluloids/tapes and that section of Nigeria's film making industry is what boomed ever since and expanded to be the face of Nigeria's movie industry today. Further to this success was the decision of these originally Igbo-speaking actors and actresses to switch to English for a wider understanding of the movies while still retaining the Igbo culture. This is the same English Nollywood we have today. In the 2000s, the government decided to merge that booming industry with the Yoruba-speaking sector under one name. They made movie production in tapes attractive that has attracted other tribes into the same sector. Theatre productions are not as financially profitable as movie making in celluloids, tapes etc. By switching to English language, they were able to accommodate talented non-Igbo actors such as Liz Benson, Olu Jacobs, Ini Edo, Omotola Ekeinde etc., and gave them the chance to excel using their talents. This same gesture was also extended to non-Igbo producers. Thus, we have several producers of non-Igbo origin who have showcased their great talents. Nollywood is encouraged to celebrate talents and we have the representation of Igbo actors, actresses, producers, directors etc. alongside non-Igbos in an Igbo-led industry. Think of the Yoruba speaking industry and Igbo-English speaking industry as 2 companies. You may have started a company first way before me and I started mine 30 years after and the overwhelming success of my company today is purely of my efforts and your being the pioneer in starting a company in Nigeria does not mean you own a stake in my company just because 'you are the first'. That is silly ideology of uneducated people. You started a company first, yes. We all acknowledge that but my own company is more successful than yours and more popular. The world is business and competition exists in the business world. The Igbos understand competition very well. My business professor taught me that successful businesses today find that very one thing or two that gives them a competitive advantage over their competitors. For the Igbos in film making, they discovered that movie production in tapes - not in theatres, is where the money is aka movie gold mine and for the Igbos, that is their competitive edge over the Yorubas. To be honest, you are making just too much efforts already to 'deconvince' me of something I know to be true. You are wasting your time. Come 10 years time, Igbos started Nollywood and own it. You cannot change that fact. 10 million Yoruba fellows easily agree that Nollywood today is Igbo-controlled and started originally as an Igbo-speaking industry. It is only few bigoted elements like you that run around trying to twist history and the truth. Not one article, not one, credits the success of Nollywood to the Yorubas not one. All overwhelmingly point to the South East. Or maybe you just have an ego problem. 2 Likes |
Re: Desmond Elliot: Why I Hid My Yoruba Identity From Nollywood by macof(m): 4:26pm On Oct 27, 2015 |
bigfrancis21: Obi Emelonye is the only one of worth with good movies like Mirror Boy and Last flight to Abuja. The others are less significant.. Either unknown or haven't produced a great movie Amaka Igwe I know through Fuji House of Commotion and nothing else. .btw that show was dominated by Yorubas in crew and cast. The movie "Osuofia in London" I know but not Kingsley Ogoro . He is relatively unknown .. meaning he probably hasn't produced any good movie like Osuofia in London for years... cus to be honest I don't know him many of the names who you and NoIgwegbe mentioned are unknown. .. you couldn't even mention any of the works of Okey Ezugwu, Dickson Iroegbu This shows that you just went to Google "igbo producers" or something. .. you probably don't know them or their movies either |
Re: Desmond Elliot: Why I Hid My Yoruba Identity From Nollywood by bigfrancis21: 4:38pm On Oct 27, 2015 |
macof: Living in bondage is being re-made. Ramsey Nouah, a Yoruba, even admitted openly to the Igbo origin of Nollywood. I find it absurd that you are pushing your luck too far against the obvious. Twenty-three years after the release of Nollywood hit epic movie ‘Living in Bondage’, award winning Nollywood Star Ramsey Nouah in partnership with entertainment entrepreneur Charles Okpaleke are set to produce the sequel to the flick that was the forerunner of the Nollywood phenomenon. 1 Like |
Re: Desmond Elliot: Why I Hid My Yoruba Identity From Nollywood by bigfrancis21: 4:50pm On Oct 27, 2015 |
macof: Top 10 Nigeria's Movie Producers As of recent (not sure which year), the top 10 Nigeria's movie producers were: 1) Teco Benson 2) Dickson Iroegbu 3) Chico Ejio 4) Lancelot Oduwa Imasuen 5) Fidelis Duker 6) Emem Isong 7) AY Makun 8.) Okey Ezeugwu 9) Muyiwa Ademola 10) Tchidi Chikere http://www.africaranking.com/most-powerful-nigerian-film-producers/5/ 1 Like |
Re: Desmond Elliot: Why I Hid My Yoruba Identity From Nollywood by bigfrancis21: 4:51pm On Oct 27, 2015 |
macof: Please. Far from it. The Yoruba movie industry is one that is said to be financially struggling. Yoruba actors and actresses are grossly underpaid compared to their Nollywood counterparts. The industry struggles every year to make profits. We find several Yoruba actors and actresses switching to the English-speaking side such as Eniola Badmus, Funke Akindele etc. The viewing audience of the Yoruba movie industry is limited to the south-west. Out of a population of 35 million, we assume 20 million are young children and adults in the movie-viewing age, excluding babies, toddlers and old people. We assume that 15 million out of 20 million people watch Yoruba movies, given the fact that not everybody loves to watch movies, thus we have an average Yoruba movie viewing audience of 15 million. On the other hand, Yoruba movie watchers also watch Nollywood movies. Nollywood movies cater to 100 million+ people out of Nigeria's 170 million population, plus populations from Ghana, Namibia, Gambia, Benin, Cameroun, South Africa, Haiti, Jamaica, Brazil, Europe, Asia etc., with a viewing audience of over 200 million. The English-Igbo sector is the backbone of Nollywood's revenue. The contribution from Yoruba movies, more or less, should not be more than 5 - 15 % of Nollywood's annual gross revenue. 1 Like |
Re: Desmond Elliot: Why I Hid My Yoruba Identity From Nollywood by Nobody: 5:38pm On Oct 27, 2015 |
Very true bro, let's not allow these revisionist and propagandist to rewrite history of an industry we created bigfrancis21: 1 Like |
Re: Desmond Elliot: Why I Hid My Yoruba Identity From Nollywood by macof(m): 5:38pm On Oct 27, 2015 |
bigfrancis21: Mr. Man you cannot argue movies with me, I wouldn't want to tell you my personal life but it's obvious I'm more exposed to Nollywood than you are. As I've said before all movies produced in nigeria except for maybe the hausa movies are part of Nollywood. .and Yorubas, Edos, Efik-Ibibio contribute just as much effort and even greater talent into the movies that make up Nollywood I'm not bigot, I told you I hate bigotry. ..you are the bigoted fool here Claiming the great works of Olu Jacobs, Afolayan family, Lancelot Imasuen, Amata family, Alex Usifo, Sam Loco, Enebele Elebuwa, Omotola Ekeinde, Ramsey Noua, Ini Edo, Omoni Oboli, Funke Akindele, Eniola Badmus, Liz Benson, Nse Ikpe Etim, Imeh Umoh etc as Igbo work Igbos didn't create a new industry, filmmaking is still filmmaking, and even though Yorubas started filmmaking in Nigeria, I never claimed yorubas own it. The producers of "Living in Bondage" built on the same industry started by Yorubas" NOLLYWOOD IS AN INDUSTRY , THERE ARE SEVERAL COMPANIES INVOLVED IN FILM PRODUCTION, are you too uneducated to realize this? "Nollywood" is just a name.. A name for CINEMA IN NIGERIA See how bigotry turns people into iidiots? 4 Likes 2 Shares |
Re: Desmond Elliot: Why I Hid My Yoruba Identity From Nollywood by Speshalspeshie: 5:40pm On Oct 27, 2015 |
silverdam:free d guy abeg! If removin a name to fix it later would make u hammer tell me u wldnt do same... Its not lyk he killed smbdy. Its his name, he cn choose to do wtever he wants to with it. 1 Like |
Re: Desmond Elliot: Why I Hid My Yoruba Identity From Nollywood by bigfrancis21: 5:51pm On Oct 27, 2015 |
macof: @bold...aha! That is what I have been telling you all along but it failed to sink in all these while. My message finally starts sinking in. Are you trying to turn around and 'teach' me what I have been yelling out at you since the past 5 days? I have kept saying it, Yorubas started film making in Nigeria in the form of theatrical plays but the section of Nigeria's movie industry called Nollywood proper specialized in producing films in celluloids, tapes etc. started with the Igbos and is still controlled by the Igbos till today, accommodating non Igbo speakers such as Olu Jacobs and also giving non-Igbo producers such Kunle Afolayan the opportunity to showcase his talent within the English-Igbo movie industry. It is often a wonder Kunle Afolayan cannot make any major movie hit within his native Yoruba movie industry but chooses to produce within the English Igbo-controlled movie industry. What do the Igbos get in return? Mockery, accusations and whatnot for their generosity. You need not even reveal your personal life on here, it is totally needless to the discourse at hand her. To be honest, you have been the one since the last 5 days arguing aimlessly and pushing your luck too far against the obvious. You cannot back up your twisted 'fact' with any reliable source. Not even one. Your frantic efforts at finding one article, just one article, to support your twisted reasoning keeps failing because there are none online and offline and suddenly you realize you stand alone in your illusion. You are only beginning to realize your folly after all. 1 Like |
Re: Desmond Elliot: Why I Hid My Yoruba Identity From Nollywood by Nobody: 5:57pm On Oct 27, 2015 |
Macoffuu the clown, I give up on you for comparing Olujacobs to Ogadagidi Pete Edochie, Comparing his wife to Mama G is an insult that will take you Mba Ji asaa, two white cocks to appease, the other one's you mentioned are good but not better than the Igbo folks, pls note ramsey Is not yoloba macof: |
Re: Desmond Elliot: Why I Hid My Yoruba Identity From Nollywood by Nobody: 6:10pm On Oct 27, 2015 |
Do you know that AY movie, the last one was written by Ikechukwu Nnamani bigfrancis21: 1 Like |
Re: Desmond Elliot: Why I Hid My Yoruba Identity From Nollywood by Nobody: 6:13pm On Oct 27, 2015 |
The so called kunde afolayaa was mentored by the late Amaka Igwe 1 Like |
Re: Desmond Elliot: Why I Hid My Yoruba Identity From Nollywood by bigfrancis21: 6:16pm On Oct 27, 2015 |
DikeOha882: The same way several Yoruba music artists are mentored by Igbos in the music industry. P-Square mentored May D, Don Jazzy mentored Reekado Banks and crew etc. 2 Likes 1 Share |
Re: Desmond Elliot: Why I Hid My Yoruba Identity From Nollywood by macof(m): 6:32pm On Oct 27, 2015 |
bigfrancis21: Your list is nonsense. AY Makun 7th, just because of 30 days in Atlanta? When last did Chico Ejiro (not Ejio you ignoramus) work on a movie? Teco Benson can never be number 1, To be at the top you must be consistent with quality Teco Benson lacks this. .. so does Fidelis Duker. .. Dickson Iroegbu, Okey Ezugwu. .two names I've never heard in my life. It's funny how you keep running to Internet articles. .. when normal human beings should be speaking of what they " know" through their own exposure to films in nigeria Where do you put Kunle Afolayan, Charles Novia , Tunde Kelani, Staphanie Okereke? 2 Likes 1 Share |
Re: Desmond Elliot: Why I Hid My Yoruba Identity From Nollywood by elopee3000(m): 6:50pm On Oct 27, 2015 |
macof:ur not serious everything about nollywood is igbo set up with with igwe as king the music the play at background or thier names in the movie must be igbo names ,in the whole Africa people from diffrent countries know Nigeria king now as igwe not oba or seriki even in some English movie omotola will add igbo language likewise ini Edo mercy Johnson they speak little igbo ,where is the movies been shot? from enugu asaba onitsha owerri inshort olu Jacob is living in asaba at moment so tell us another story,baba suwe with all the charcoal he has be painting since can u compare him with nkem owo or chiwetalu agu in comedy circle in Africa,why do u think funke akindele is going to enugu every week not mention king of mumu ibu 4 Likes |
Re: Desmond Elliot: Why I Hid My Yoruba Identity From Nollywood by bigfrancis21: 7:01pm On Oct 27, 2015 |
macof: The other producers could possibly be in the next top 10. Of course, I would rely more on an internet source (oftentimes verifiable) than you, a lonely internet revisionist. 1 Like |
Re: Desmond Elliot: Why I Hid My Yoruba Identity From Nollywood by macof(m): 10:58pm On Oct 27, 2015 |
bigfrancis21: more lies. non yorubas that understand yoruba (which is a lot) watch Yoruba movies. And Yorubas are more than 35 million. .in nigeria we are close to 45 million excluding Benin Republic and Togo. ..plus all over west africa and the carribeans that people are interested in Yoruba language movies. ..especially the ones portraying yoruba history. My igbo in laws watch Yoruba movies like no man's business. At least 60 million people are regulars at watching yoruba movies. I'll say Yoruba movies generate 30% of the Nollywood revenue. Far more than that of Igbo movies Even Igbos hardly watch igbo movies, they prefer English movies Unlike Yorubas and Hausas Everyone complains, even the person having it easy wants it easier. There are Igbo personalities who devote their carrers to Yoruba movies. .. Mike Ezuruonye, Chidi Mokeme, Emeka Ike have appeared in some Yoruba movies 1 Like |
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