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ABUJA, Nigeria: Tall
Drums is pleased to announce that the seminal work in mythology,
from the Belly of the Gods, has been authorized by the author and
publisher, to be made into a movie. Written by the new Jersey-based Dr. Ugorji O. Ugorji and published by Sungai Corp. and Sungai Nigeria
Limited in 1993, the book will be transformed into an epic movie that
has been designed to produce the first major collaboration between
operatives in Hollywood, USA, and the Nigerian movie industry popularly
referred to as Nollywood. One of Nigeria's most versatile film and
television producers, Bakare Adeoye of Bakky Adeoye Films and Liz
Agbugba of Centrepoint Advertising Ltd, has reached tentative agreements
with the author and publisher of the book to produce this epic movie for
release in 2008.
According to the blurb about the book found on Talldrums.com, From the
Belly of the
Gods "brings harmony to the hitherto dichotomous notions of creation and
evolution." Using the European legend of Santa Claus or Saint Nick as a
hook, the author weaves a story of an African origin of man and the
evolution of at least two of the races – Africans (blacks) and Europeans
(whites). Rather than the biblical account of seven days of creation,
the book posits four days of creation, centered on a calendar of four
market days.
Mr. Adeoye says, "This is a phenomenal seminal work about the mystery of
creation from an African perspective that is well written and very
convincing even in book form. It gives us an opportunity to produce a
classic epic story in celluloid that would match up with any work
produced anywhere else in the world." The feature film will be shot on
different locations in Nigeria for 21 days, featuring some of the best
male and female actors in Nigeria at the height of their careers, and
over 1,000 extras. The locations are Mbaise in Imo state, Arochukwu–Ohafia
in Abia State, Isiukwuato–Okigwe {a site where water flows out from the
rock}, Enugu water falls {Eyi and Achi), Maiduguri {Sahara Desert and
Lake Chad), Mambila Plateau, Lagos, and Abuja. There is also discussion
about shooting a scene in the US involving a well known professor who
will make a cameo appearance.
And the producers are setting their eyes pretty high. Mrs. Agbugba was
ecstatic in revealing that they want American movie director, writer,
and actor Spike Lee to direct the film, in what would be the first
collaboration between Spike Lee's 40 Acres and a Mule company and the
movie industry in Nigeria. "We have great directors in Nigeria who will
also work on the film, but given the history-making project we have in
mind, we believe it would be a great Spike Lee joint" Agbugba said. She
said the Nigerian directors would include Andy Amenechi and Niji Akanni.
In wishing the producers well in this quest, the distinguished Professor
of African history, Professor Toyin Falola praised the consciousness
behind a creative collaboration across African ethnic lines and across
the Atlantic Ocean. The Frances Higginbothom Nalle Centennial Professor
of History at the University of Texas at Austin added that "Dr. Ugorji
is set to fuse Nollywood with Hollywood, creating a notable icon of
cultural Diaspora of everlasting value." Reacting to the news, US-based
literary and arts critic Mr. Oseloka Obaze says the project is
ambitious. "Maybe too ambitious, but it is gratifying as well as
exciting to see our people looking to move to the nest stage in movie
making."
Professor Molefi Kete Asante, the father and author of Afrocentricity,
who is an intellectual influence on the author says "From the Belly of
the Gods is a very entertaining story that celebrates the way Africans
have approached mystery. I think a movie version could be brilliantly
conceived and executed by Nollywood." The Temple University Professor
who set up the first doctorate degree awarding program in African
American Studies in the world went on to add that "gaining the
participation of Spike Lee would give it a lot of expertise and genius."
Meanwhile, Obiageli Adiasor, an Administrative Assistant to the
publisher of Sungai Nigeria Limited, says that the company has ordered a
reprint of 5,000 copies of the book for the Nigerian market in
anticipation of the interest the film would generate. "We expect
delivery by the end of October, following which a national campaign
would be sustained until the movie is out in 2008," she said from the
Abuja office of Sungai. The company has established a niche as the
publisher of note for audacious works, such as the best selling Philip
Efiong's Nigeria and Biafra: My story, Sam Amadi's Nnamani's Third Way,
the late General Joe Garba's Fractured history: Elite shifts and policy
changes in Nigeria, Molefi Asante's Scream of blood: Desetlerlism in
Southern Africa, Olusegun Fayemi's Balancing acts, Theophile Obenga's
African philosophy in world history, Umar Ardo's Murrtala Muhammed,
George Alily's Naval Diplomacy: A critical component of national power,
Chike Momah's Titi: Biafran maid in Geneva, Ugorji's Tall Drums:
Portraits of Nigerians who are changing America, and so many other
titles.
The Nigerian Movie Industry
The Nigerian total film market potential relative to the size of the
economy is in excess of N522 billion. Even as the potential in the
country does not translate to any manifest economic index primarily
because of lack of support from a good number of corporate institutions
and big private investors. The Nigeria movie industry has also generated
over $300 million in international sales between 1992 and 2006. There is
an estimated audience of over 50 million, and we all know how popular
Nigerian movies are among Nigerians in Diaspora and Africans of other
nationalities as well. Nigeria is presently the third largest film
making country in the world after the United States (Hollywood) and
India (Bollywood).
It is therefore against this back drop that feature film and
home video have become the most effective medium of
entertainment, information dissemination and didactic learning in
colleges and higher institutions in Nigeria and abroad. The film on From
the Belly of the Gods promises to break new grounds in production and
casting, as well as in distribution and patronage of movie audiences in
Nigeria and abroad. It shall be entered for film festivals around the
world; it will grace college and university libraries in Nigeria and the
U.S.A. where the novel is currently being used as a prescribed text in
African literary studies.
Genevieve Nnaji
Contact: Victor Amadi (0803-311-6418)
Media and Marketing Consultant to Tall Drums
Info@talldrums.com
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