The Ghana movie
industry and self-owned productions!
MOVIE productions in Ghana look like a lucrative venture now. This is akin to what obtains in Nigeria, where most of the actors and
actresses are shifting into movie productions. Our Ghanaian movie stars are
also doing same.
First was Selasie Ibrahim with ‘The CEO’, ‘Shackles’ and ‘Secret
Burden’. Then came Lydia Forson with
‘The Masqueraders’ and Yvonne Nelson with ‘Single and Married’ and ‘House of Gold’.
Van Vicker followed with ‘The Hands of Time’ and ‘Joni Waka’; Yvonne Okoro with ‘The Contract’; Kafui Danku with ‘Letters to My Mother’ and
Bibi Bright with ‘Lost in His Glory’.
Selassie Ibrahim's production |
Now Juliet Ibrahim is ready with her much-hyped and talked-about movie ‘My Number One Fan’, and more will soon follow from the camps of Zynell Zuh and Eddie Nartey who are working on ‘When Love Comes Around’ and ‘Could This Be Love?’ respectively.
Cross-border
collaborations
For most of these productions, the actors and actresses go
to the extent of featuring actors based in Nigeria, South Africa and other
countries beyond Ghana. One other
interesting twist is the introduction of popular comedians, musicians, their
friends and siblings and now Big Brother housemates. One of my recent discoveries
is the inclusion of some characters from the Kumawood industry.
Perhaps this development
is in response to the incessant pleas for English and Twi movie actors
to work together or as a way of reaching the Twi audience in Ghana, who seem to
enjoy more of movies in the Agya Koo
vein. In Zynell’s upcoming flick, it is reported that Nollywood lover boy Jim Iyke is to be featured, while Eddie
Nartey’s flick features Twi actor Kwabena
Nkansa, known as Lil Win; Confidence Haugen and good old Mikki Osei Berko.
Yvonne Okoro's production |
This will be the first time that the ‘Golden Boy’ of Ghanaian movies, Majid Michel, will be acting alongside a Twi actor and the
other characters aforementioned. I am
actually wondering how that will turn out and the medium they will be
communicating in. My guess is that it will be a replica of the ‘Joni Waka’ saga
by Van Vicker where Agya Koo spoke Twi
while Van portrayed the American boy.
Are the multiple
roles necessary?
This advancement in the movie industry is a plus for these actors
and actresses, but it is beginning to look like a competition, especially on
the part of the females. I wonder if their
aim in shifting into movie production is either to prove a point or just to follow
the crowd. It beats me to see actors and actresses turn producers and starring
in their own movies. As one entertainment journalist friend of mine queried, ‘Is
it a must for them to be in the movie as characters or is it that when they are
not part, then the movie will be
incomplete?’
A star-studded production by Juliet Ibrahim |
The picture is compounded
when one considers the fact that the
actors are the directors as well as the producers of the same movie! How does
that work? (I certainly would need some sound education on this.)
On the other hand, I am tempted to ask the actors-turned-producers
if they ever wish to be considered for such
roles by other producers. This is because if they are indeed producers, who would
want to consider them for an acting role in a movie, or even a ‘waka pass’ one
at that?
The latest production by Nadia Buari |
On the whole, these self-owned productions are generating lots of competition in the industry, fostering
collaborations between our Ghanaian stars and movie stars from other
countries. A marketer tells me, ‘It is
helping the sale of the movies in our neighbouring countries and, above all,
attracting the Twi market’.
My wish is that
diligent work would be done in connection with these productions so that there will be variety
in plots. I believe there are yet more
stories to tell and more discoveries of ‘wanabe’s’ to be done!
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