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02May
DEFYING ALL ODDS A REVIEW OF NKANYA NKWAI’S SAVING MBANGO (movie)
By Ernest Kanjo (Journalist, Film Criticism Trainee) PDF Print E-mail
Saturday, 02 May 2020 20:08

saving Mbango_the_movie_Nkanya Nkwai’s SAVING MBANGO, produced by Stephanie Tum and Julia L. Ngam, is a typical reflection of story sincerity. From start to finish, role interpreters inhabit their characters to sharply contrast stereotypical opinions that Cameroonian artistic and technical film performance is void of realness. It becomes easy to dislodge the said impression upon exposure to the movie in its entirety.

THE STORY

SAVING MBANGO is not a love story like the others. How can love be so defiant of all forces that stand against it – family pressure, poverty, turning point events, etc? In answering this question, the writer in SAVING MBANGO and the filmmaker succeed in weaving two diametrically opposing plots to finally pick love as champion. Even John’s (Gudisz Fungwa) consistent family conflicts that would appear to have a toll on his sincere relationship with Mbango (Laura Onyama), does not sum up to prevent love from prevailing.

John’s offer of basic livelihood necessities to his lover – palm oil (market scene), a bunch of plantain and bag of other items (Mbango’s compound scene), reducing her burden by helping with the farm basket (farm to village road scene) and desperate attempts at saving her during fits, are moments which would naturally implant hope of a much more brighter end on the mind of protagonist.

When the filmmaker forces John to stoop in water, on the stony bed of the river, that is a reassurance to Mbango that she is heading for the best results in love. What else would cause the protagonist to think otherwise when she climbs to the top of the ladder of marriage, wig-on-head, clad in gorgeous gown in the assembly of the entire village.

Flashback to scene one in the movie - the wide shot, presenting the dilapidating ‘karaboot’ (wooden buildings in Cameroon’s coastal settlements) is a projection of peasantry, that would characterize life in the story. His first posture of raising his voice against his entire household, is Mr. Penda’s (Otia Vitalis) habitual angry mood that would litter his scenes throughout the story. The writer makes sure the words and curses of Mbango’s never-shall-be father-in-law, are carefully chosen to eventually reflective happenings in the story.

When he scolds his children for being lazy, hardly does John’s (Godisz Fungwa) dad know that laziness, his own canker, is what will haunt him to the extent of his inability present a son, Oggen (Libota MacDonald), viable enough to foot a bride price. The lazy household’s later dependence on the only hard-working child, John, is signaled from this beginning and this is a sideline root cause of the ensuing conflict in the story.

Perhaps, the tap root of the problematic, is the quasi complete disconnect of the head of the home and the rest of his family which the writer intelligently portrays. When he jumps back into the house, as his spouse and children reluctantly depart to the farm, grabs his drink, gulps it and nods in satisfaction, it is a clear reflection of separation in which the story will cook till its end. What a long distance between father and his family! But does that affect his son’s attachment to his lover? Rhetoric!

ARTISTS’ PERFORMANCE

SAVING MBANGO picked it cast. It still would pick this cast and peck them in their square holes if the movie had to be shot anew.

Coming from a KOD (a Musing Derick Tenn film, produced by Ala Leo and Edith Pikwa) background, Laura Onyama puts up an expected spellbinding village girl acting performance. The skepticism expressions brilliantly performed in scenes of danger, depict the mood of a typical village girl who is oppressed by forces she literally cannot overcome. Laura Onyama’s (Mbango) consistent sorry mood and soft-spoken nature, resonate the poverty, eating up her two-people family (she and her grandma) structure. This, the filmmaker helps the viewer feel with close-up shots at every given instance.

Perhaps, scenes of Mbango’s dropping in fits are proof of Onyama’s acting prowess. How she would dangle herself in John’s arms, portray an actress who gifted in surrendering herself to a lover she can trust anytime, any day. Cajoling acting!

If SAVING MBANGO was going to be the only film in his career, then lead character, Gudisz Fungwa (John) has scored the A grade every actor yearns for. First, like his interlocutor, Laura Onyama (Mbango), Gudisz employs method acting in all its ramifications. His actions in all the scenes where he professes love to his never-to-be wife, succeed in provoking emotions in the viewer – his facial expressions, sweet talk, consoling language, crashing on and lifting of his sick lover, etc. Perhaps, the canoe rescue mission trip and burial scenes would be award-winning acting as per any jury.

Otia Vitalis (Mr. Penda), is usually squarely fitted in head of the family roles, but in SAVING MBANGO, the actor appears to be even more energized. Backed by his greyed looks, the actor performs his lines with some appealing vocal authority. The scenes where Mr. Penda orders his progeny and spouse out of the house to go farming and one where he calls for order in a ramshackle family argument, paint the picture of an actor who fits in this above assertion. Furthermore, for an actor reputed for his positive roles in his movies, Otia’s irresponsible father constant beer-drinking and violent attitude performance, would be great role interpretation. Even his toning down in the judgment day scene when the actor apologizes for his failed fatherly task, is a good display of versatility that is worthy of note.

Libota McDonald (Oggen) as well as Solange Ojong (Njanjo) deliver mature acting as they normally would, in their movies. What came to them in SAVING MBANGO, was equal to these two. The amazing flexibility in their performance as leads in Billy Bob Ndive Lifongo’s LITTLE CINDY to supporting characters in SAVING MBANGO, explains their strength as story interpreters. This time, it is a Solange Ojong (Njanjo) who, heavy with child, will not be conspicuous in action scenes, yet the actress, rooted in her seat, would use her mouth in doing the trick. “You no try, you no try at all…” would surely be an improvised line, but this expression at the story’s conclusion phase is a last straw that breaks Mr. Penda’s (Otia Vitalis) arrogance under which the latter’s family had suffocated throughout the story. Good acting!

SYMBOLS

If there is one thing the filmmaker in SAVING MBANGO does to capture the emotions as well as reason he seeks from viewers, it is the effective use of symbols. The image of an oil palm mill being turned depicts the Mondoni community. Palm oil production is one of the main occupations of the people along the coastal belt of Cameroon, especially villages that harbour the CDC and SOCAPLAM Agro-industrial outfits.

The filmmaker uses love scenes in the river as a way of relating the people’s attachment to water activities – a common phenomenon in coastal settlements. The same applies to the canoe, the main means of transportation there.

In the scenes where John interacts with his friends who attend university, the writer is using English to symbolize the western/formal educated class. When the former’s friends Epie (Raph), Joe (Esistern) and Onyama (Malvis), later divert to pidgin, it is the writer’s way of presenting a typical Cameroonian scenario, where lingua franca has its place even among school-going youths.

Beer-in-hand from scene one of the story, symbolizes a Cameroonian society that suffers with a negative reputation of habitual alcohol consumption, at times, in the name of drowning problems.

The storm that precedes the rain is a signal of further struggles that await John as the story rides on.

Throughout the story, the filmmaker presents his lead character with an abnormally tainted eye pupil, certainly to signify witchcraft which she is suspected of having.

Perhaps, the symbol that stands out in SAVING MBANGO would be the lead character’s shaved head, a depiction of the viewer would recognize in the middle of the story. Until, the movie is watched in its entirety, that symbol, effectively used in the process, would not be understood.

DIRECTING, FILMING TECHNIQUES

SAVING MBANGO is a manifest of modern-day film directing. Unlike in the long-time past African movies, scenes in the movie are snappy and only roll longer when they are absolutely called for. When the filmmaker uses long range shots for most of his family gathering scenes, it is intended to arouse the feeling of togetherness, even amid disputes. His close-up and extreme close-up shots are carefully chosen and used mostly in Mbango and John professing scenes, to buttress the expression of love between the two.

However, the award-winning shot is the exterior wide/long range, chosen for the hospital premises scene, where Mbango declares her intension to resign but is objected. The filmmaker deliberately shots the characters from a hind position as a way of conveying a message of the unknown. The shot becomes even more distant as John walks away in desperation (though still determined), introducing an environment of suspense on the viewer’s mind. He succeeds a hundred percent in igniting such feelings.

Shot on High Definition (HD), SAVING MBANGO is served as a bowl of impeccable screen images. Even when cinematic lighting is adequate, most of the scenes of the film are exterior, thus, natural lighting.

The movie’s sound on it part, is void of hiccups.

SAVING MBANGO, performed in pidgin (a lingua franca used in Cameroon and other countries), is not subtitled, potentially causing decoding problems to viewers of English language background, who form a bulk of Amazon Prime video visitors.

In SAVING MBANGO, Nkanya Nkwai succeeds in telling a story in the easiest way possible to be understood. His cast, the location and meticulous manufacture of cinematic images that knit the story’s plots, result in an amazing piece of work whose consumer could be caught watching again and again. Brilliantly shaping the victory of love though his characters and accompanying filmmaking techniques, is a successful advert of the triumph of virtue over vice - timeless law of nature. However, it only by watching SAVING MBANGO to its end, that you would waste no second in signing Lynno Lovert (writer) and Nkanya Nkwai (director) as trusted storytellers.

Technical Sheet

Movie title: “Saving Mbango”

Length: 110 minutes

Type: Feature film

Location: Mondoni

Story/Screenplay: Lynno Lovert

Editor: Achille Brice

Producer: Stephanie Tum

Executive Producers: Stephanie Tum, Julia L. Ngam

Production Outfits: Embi Productions & The Powerhouse

Director: Nkanya Nkwai

First premiered: October 26, 2019

Streaming: Amazon Prime Video

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Ernest Kanjo is a USA-based Journalist and Writer with an interest in arts, culture and entertainment reporting. Founder of Apex 1 Radio – www.apex1radio.com and Editor-in-Chief of TIPTOPSTARS (online entertainment magazine) - www.tiptopstars.com he has written extensively on the Cameroonian film industry. He is a currently a film criticism trainee. Kanjo has several awards from his works in film reporting.




Last Updated on Saturday, 02 May 2020 20:14
 
26Nov
Merlisa Determined on set of movie “CLASH” in Toronto Canada.
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Monday, 26 November 2018 06:03


WhatsApp Image_2018-11-26_at_14.52.33The production of the movie “CLASH” has just been completed in Toronto, Canada. The film was directed by Canadian/Nigerian Award-Winning Filmmaker/Actor Pascal and marks the beginning of Nigerian-Canadian collaborations as championed by the trade commission of the Canadian consulate in Nigeria, the Nigerian embassy in Canada and the Nigerian Film and Video Censored Board (NFVCB). Shot on locations in Canada and Nigeria, ‘Clash’ and produced by Diamond Pictures, Inc, Canada, Feva TV/Wells Feva Production and TABIC, ‘Clash’ tells the story of a Nigerian immigrant in Canada.

The cast is an international ensemble that includes Hollywood actor, Brian Hooks; Caribbean actress and United Nations ambassador, Merlisa Determined; Nollywood actress and United Nations ambassador, Stephanie Linus, and Omoni Oboli, a Nollywood actress. The cast also include Canadian actors Dashawn Francis, Naima Sundiata, Derel Isaac, Chelsea Howell, German Wendy and Lou Israel. Others are Percy Dwumfour from Ghana and MC Bonde from Zimbabwe.

The project was co-financed by the Canadian Media Funds (CMF), Feva TV, Warren Beatty of AAB Talent & Management, Canada, and TABIC Nigeria. According to the producers, the choice of an international cast was to “appease the taste of the universal audience”. Produced by Ola George, Warren Beatty and Pascal Atuma,

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Clash the movie is set to premiere in Canada February 2019 and in Nigeria April 2019. Filmhouse/Filmone Distribution will release the film in Africa and Factory Film Studios Distribution will release in North America come 2019


Last Updated on Monday, 26 November 2018 19:28
 
14Feb
BLACK PANTHER: 30 MINUTES WITH CONSTANCE EJUMA
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Wednesday, 14 February 2018 21:12


blackpanther
With a very convincing argument, it can be said today that Africa makes sufficient meaning in the art of filmmaking. Black easily becomes so beautiful on screen. Even when they hesitate to publicly say it, movie lovers from other parts of the world get moved watching black actors as they play in stories. That Constance Ejuma is one of such actors who would easily appeal on the taste bud of film lovers, is an uncontestable truth. The young USA-based Cameroonian actress is unique, perhaps because of Contance's complexion - maybe her artist look - maybe her brilliance on set - but for some reason, she stands out. Just a snappy look at the cast of BLACK PANTHER, an upcoming Hollywood blockbuster, directed by Ryan Coogler, tells you the production made no error in having the actress (also producer of award-winning BEN & ARA) on board. One day to the movie's official release, the ebony actress explains how she became part of this much-awaited $200 million story, produced by Kevin Fiege and David J. Grant. Her experience working on a Hollywood set, perspectives and lots more are also what will constitute our radio conversation. Constance Ejuma will be guest on a special 30-minutes production on Apex 1 Radio this Thursday, February 15, 2018. She will be speaking from los Angeles. Join us 5:30pm EST (2:30pm in LA) on
www.apex1radio.com
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Last Updated on Sunday, 18 February 2018 00:20
 
21Dec
Philldelle Yve: Stunning rise of speech mogul
Ernest Kanjo PDF Print E-mail
Thursday, 21 December 2017 00:11

Philldella l_3The soothing glamour that often emerges as a conspicuous ingredient in screen acting has undoubtedly stood tall as the winning competitor in the race with other aspects in the business. That makes glamour the number one and in quasi all cases, the only talk that stays around permanently.

Whether screen icons are intelligible, speak intellectually or can offer reasonable and society-profitable discourse, is ironically not topical. Yet, someone had boldly emphasized that actors were, from every ramification, very brain-sounded class of people.

If we only went by the fact that these performers, through suitably crafted speech and convincing set gesticulations, are prone to tell stories written by other people, to the utter amazement of audiences, then, settling on the aforementioned, is safe.

But again, that reasoning is sadly always short in supply, perhaps, because fewer audience members have access to the hinds of scenes and curtains.  For those who habitually access actors off set, perceptions vis-à-vis the latter, are clearly different.

Philldella Yve’s outward glamorous presentation, from every indication, sweeps all the gold and jealously preserves it, at the expense of the actress’ other side – the side that harbours what material she is actually made of – the brains version. If someone simply pin-pointed the up-and-coming Nollywood set heroine as beauty and brains, then they scored the point. As a matter of fact, that is what the movie artist is.

The story of how Philldella Yve, from a dual background (Nigeria and Cameroon), stepped into the movie world will be told subsequently, but her arrival into the seventh art was the obvious finish line.  If script interpretation largely gives consideration to oral strength, which should obviously be the case in some challenging productions, then the young African actress wears the fitting garment. “Her fluent speech has been a great asset in every movie we have shot with her,” said a close Nollywood collaborator of the respectable actress.

Fluency apart, Phil, as some of her Cameroonian counterparts would affectionately call her, displays an amazing mastery of the English language. “That’s an added impetus to her work and I have a lot of admiration for her in that direction,” Germain, a lover of movies and lay film critic told TIPTOPSTARS. “Each time I watch her movies, I fling my ears wide open just to enjoy the actress’ English – she’s marvelous,” she went further.

In 2015 when the she made her maiden appearance in front of a Nollywood camera for Festival of Love, little did the 26-year-old performing artist know her subsequent days would be so professionally fulfilling. Her street and Church drama past had not appeared to speak more to her at this time, though it would later be a good story to tell. Less than 36 months down the road, her craft has secured a significantly bulky harvest, even to her own surprise. “I’d say it’s the hand of God that is changing this humble story of mine,” Phil told us. She added: “It couldn’t have been Philldella alone.” “My friends and fans have stood beside me as well, selflessly supporting every bit of my progress and I don’t take that for granted.”

Her brilliant performance, though at the first attempt, in Festival of Love, ushered in a fresh breeze of inspiration which was later to play a positive effect on Philldella’s acting prowess. She then excelled in subsequent productions including Crossing The Battle Line, Sponky Brown, To Live A Lie, My Love My Tears, Heart of A Maiden, Royal Game, Back From Congo, Mirror of The Soul and Government Treasure.

Today, Philldella’s artistry fetches the Nollywood actress her well-deserved booty as a video vixen. “I have modelled for a couple of products and services and find the experience really fulfilling,” she said. The telegenic artist further told us that she hopes to land many more branding jobs, but was not lying on her laurels. “I work day-in day-out to stay relevant in the art and hope God continues to give me the strength to do so,” she said. 

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Last Updated on Monday, 25 December 2017 07:19
 
04Nov
Rising music stars: Les Roots lay solid foundation
Ernest Kanjo PDF Print E-mail
Saturday, 04 November 2017 15:37

tiptopstarstiptopstarstiptopstarsWhatsApp Image_2017-10-31_at_21.36.15








New music on the way! It’s a new moment with new, yet experienced singers! The arrival in the music arena of Les Roots, the latest music band, is being announced. As anxiety grips fervent lovers of urban music, the engineers of this new development are explaining that something interestingly different is about to happen, not just the African music industry, but to the art of singing as a whole.

“It’s the responsibility of Zonetak Records to kick off this new journey in the most befitting manner, reason why we are developing what we consider the most quality-prone maiden product,” Emmanuel Takusi of the Zonetak Studio filmmaking outfit (with a new outlet in music production), explains.

Made up of four brilliant singers (Mbengis, 29, Dready 27, Jamdong aka Pee, 22 and Kodèh aka Boxi, 18), Les Roots is at the verge of releasing Uprising, its maiden EP and a single which are in gestation. The upcoming Zontak Record EP and single are being recorded in Kumba, Camerooon with five hit tracks including Nchêmeh - Nchêwoh (meaning you give me and so that I can give back to you), Nakwalangeh (meaning God should direct us), Mouchois and Word of God (the single).  

More information on this new project in our subsequent updates as well as radio programs with the artists and their producers speaking!
Last Updated on Thursday, 16 November 2017 20:29
 
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