Category: Nollywood

Nollywood is a category that covers films that are made in Nigeria, by Nigerians and largely for a Nigerian audience. Films such as “Half of A Yellow Sun” is not a Nollywood film. It was written by a Nigeria about Nigeria and has some of the members of the cast as Nigerians, but the commission and the budget and the main actors are foreign which makes the film non-Nigerian. Shareman Media and Slate Films are not Nigerian production firms so their work cannot be passed as Nollywood. At best, films like “Half of A Yellow Sun” and the coming “Americanah” are half-Nigerian and when they flop in the box office like “Half of A Yellow Sun,” they are fully foreign. By Nollywood, we mean the professionally-made Nigerian movies, made in English for the cinemas. We all know of the cheap direct-to-video movies that make up the bulk of the industry and we are glad to exclude them. They find their ways into Youtube and in African Magic Epic. Let them remain there. Also excluded are the one-hour movies commissioned by M-net which should mean they are quality films and they are mostly of great picture quality but they mostly are extremely low-budgeted and too brief to be called a feature-length movie. Of course everything Nigerian on TV is Nollywood but not every one of them is for us. Many players in the industry including Ramsey Nouah have spoken of his earnest hope for the revolution of Nollywood through the for-cinema movies also tagged the New Nollywood. At this site, we support them solidly. Join us to review only Cinema movies. Contact Choice on editor@heavyng.com or heavyng247@gmail.com and we can talk.

Netflix Naija

Netflix Naija Is Making Original Dramas For Nigeria: What It Means For Nollywood

It seemed just like yesterday when Nigerians lost their voices in their giddy celebration of the purchase of Genevieve’s “Lionheart” by streaming giant, Netflix. It also feels like a generation ago because we have now seen that there is nothing too special with being purchased and featured on Netflix – we have seen too many ...

AMCVA 2020 Nominations

AMVCA 2020: The Full List Of Nominations

2020 Africa Magic Viewers Choice Awards nominees were announced tonight, the 6th of February 2020. The hosts were the newly- or not so newly-minted Mr. and Mrs. Ibrahim Suleiman and Linda Ejiofor-Suleiman. Speaking before the nominations were unveiled, Femi Odugbemi MNet renowned filmmaker and head of Jury that made the selection praised the stars and ...

The Legend of Inipki

The Legend Of Inikpi: A Great Concept And A Missed Opportunity

When we did a profile of Mercy Johnson, the writer made a point about how Mercy Johnson is slow in making the switch to the big screen of the cinema and she concluded that Mercy has the body, the talents and the personality for the big screen. With “The Legend of Inikpi”, Mercy Johnson has ...

Your Excellency Movie: What Doesn’t Kill You May Make You Think

I was reluctant about watching “Your Excellency” because of its cover picture. See, one of the worst Nigerian movies I have seen in the past two years is “Chief Daddy”, I am not a fan of “Jenifa’s Diary” and I have already said my mind about “My Siblings and I“. All these shows have one ...

Merry Men 2

Merry Men 2: Is It Worth Your Time?

I was in the village when “Merry Men 2” came out. It was one movie I billed to watch but the season caught me in the village and I forgot about it in the noise, glamor, and intrigues of weddings, house warming, and meeting old aunties and avoiding the go-get-married gang. I got on Twitter ...

Seven

Seven Movie Review: A Full Take On Tosin Igho’s Commendable Effort

It is always the nightmare of every rich man’s son to be given conditions before inheriting his father’s wealth. Tosin Igho’s “Seven” is brilliant and there are so many reasons why you should appreciate him as a director. And this is no reason you shouldn’t question some of his subplots and exaggerated scenes. Nowadays, it’s ...

Living in Bondage

Living In Bondage Review: A Dry Meat That Fills The Mouth

“You speak Igbo, you drink palm wine, and you like highlife. Just take my heart… Open heart surgery.” This is the character of Andy Okeke’s son Nnamdi Okeke, played by Swanky JKA (not a Kenyan with that name – he is Igbo and an actor who can be a local champion like Zubby Michael and ...

love is war

Love is War Is A Fine Movie Marred by Plot Inconsistency

Love is war and couples end up on the floor, couch, bed with every touch and kiss announcing a raw intensity – breathing comes fast, heart rates faster as every thrust makes the body writhe. However, for Hankuri (Yuri) Philips played by Omoni Oboli and Demeji Philips portrayed by Richard Mofe-Damijo, it was a love ...