The Nigerian film industry has come under fire over the warped values it espouses.
Most Nigerians either love or hate Nollywood, with not too many occupying the middle ground.
In
primary school, children play clapping games while singing songs about
Living in Bondage, considered the first Nollywood blockbuster, and the
film that launched the Nigerian cinema industry.
However, as the
industry grew, parents began to forbid their children to watch Nigerian
movies due to the abundant depictions of rituals or “juju”.
Still
Nollywood continued its ascent, and it is not until when a Nigerian
goes outside that he realise how much of an influence Nollywood has.
Perhaps
Nollywood is so influential because of its shows of wealth, which many
living in poverty aspire to, while simultaneously reflecting the
realities and challenges of ordinary people as it imparts one moral
message or another.
But while many criticise the industry for its
obsession with witchcraft, there’s been a lot less criticism about the
way in which women are portrayed and treated in these movies.
And
when people discuss the female characters, the focus is largely on how
scantily dressed they are, and what a bad influence they are on young
women.
For a country that prides itself on being morally
righteous and religious, you can’t help but wonder what kind of morals
most Nollywood movies are trying to communicate.
If Nollywood is a reflection of Nigerian society, then what it reveals doesn’t say much about how Nigerians view women.
Nollywood movies feature heavy doses of sexism that even the least feminist Nigerian is likely to pick up on.
In
movies such as Blackberry Babes, White Hunters and Fazebook Babes,
women are depicted as cold and two-timing, always in search of a rich
man or sugar daddy, thus creating a world in which men are seemingly
oppressed by women who use them only for financial gain.
Others do their bit in normalising r*pe culture in Nigeria and generating sympathy for defilers and abusers.
I have personally sat through movies that had “romantic” storylines in which women fell in love with their defilers!
Assertive
women who take matters into their own hands, or who are ambitious and
focus on their careers – always get the short end of the stick.
Another
trope involves women and abortions. Abortion is illegal in Nigeria, and
there are women who go through risky procedures to have them done.
However, in these movies, any woman who has an abortion either dies or ends up unable to have children.
When
Nollywood tries to highlight the problem of domestic violence in
Nigeria and the challenges faced by abused women, the result usually
falls short of the stated aim.
For example, in A Private Storm, the filmmaker draws more sympathy for the abusive husband than for his battered wife.
One has to ask why did the filmmakers chose to tell the story from the male perspective?
A
petition in Lagos started by Bayo Olupohunda, is attracting signatures
from all over the world, which suggests more people are becoming aware
of the problem.
Olupohunda notes that Nollywood “movies are
dominated by scenes of s*x and extreme violence against women”, and
concludes that that Nollywood scripts perpetuate violence against women
while cementing the longstanding patriarchal narrative.
While we
wait for Nollywood to get it right when it comes to women, we can enjoy
filmmaker and video artist Zina Saro-Wiwa’s “alt-Nollywood” short film,
Phyllis, a breath of fresh air.
In Phyllis, the tropes concerning women in Nollywood are subverted.
The
character Phyllis is a woman who lives alone, making her independent in
a country where women who are independent and single still get labelled
as “witches” or prostitute.
She is a psychic vampire trying to
become human through wigs, Jesus and Nollywood. The supernatural is
present in Phyllis – a reference to Nollywood – yet different because
the story is told from the perspective of the “witch”.
Phyllis is
complex in a way that most Nollywood movies do not have the time for,
which I suppose isn’t surprising that it is primarily a money making
industry.
I’m not alone in hoping Phyllis provides inspiration
for home-based Nollywood filmmakers, though I don’t think Nollywood
filmmakers are quite ready to take such a big step.
In the
meantime, one can hope that Nollywood 2.0 will turn out to be good news
for women in Nigeria as a whole – and will do at least a bit more to
challenge patriarchy in Nigeria. (This is Africa)
http://olofofovillage.com/2013/05/07/parents-forbidding-children-watching-nigerian-movies/
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