Film News South Africa

Nigeria and SA lead AMAA nominations

Nigeria has received 52 nominations and South Africa 45 for the Africa Movie Academy Awards. They were followed by Ghana with 17, Kenya with 14, Uganda with five, Tanzania with three, then Algeria, Cameroon, Guinea, Rwanda, and Zimbabwe.
Nigeria and SA lead AMAA nominations

Most nominated films include South Africa's Otelo Burning and How to 2 Steal 2 Million; Nigeria's Adesuwa; Ghana's Somewhere in Africa; The Nigerian-South African co-production Man on Ground; and Kenya's Rugged Priest.

There were also nominations for films linked to the diaspora in the US, Canada, France, Germany, Guadalupe, Italy, Jamaica, and the UK.

Entries from the diaspora

AMAA received 328 entries from across Africa, up from 220 in 2011. This includes 134 feature films, 88 short films, 57 documentaries and six animations. Forty-three entries came from Africans in the diaspora, with the other entries coming from 23 countries across the continent.

South African surfing film Otelo Burning scooped the most nominees (13), followed closely by South African film noir How 2 Steal 2 Million (11) and Nigeria's Benin-set historical epic Adesuwa (10). Ghana's civil war film Somewhere in Africa has seven nominations, as does the Nigerian-South African xenophobia-themed co-production Man on Ground, while Kenya's Rugged Priest has six.

Dr Asantewa Olantunji, director of programming of The Pan African Film Festival, headed this year's jury, which included June Giavanni, programmer for Planet Africa at The Toronto International Film Festival; Keith Shiri, founder and film curator at the London festival, Africa at The Pictures; Dorothee Wenner, a curator at The Berlin Film Festival; Shaibu Husseini, an actor, dancer and The Nigerian Guardian arts journalist; Steve Ayorinde, editor-in-chief of The Daily Mirror; Ayoko Babu, executive director of The Pan African Film Festival; Dr Hyginus Ekwuazi, a film scholar and critic; and directors Berni Goldblat and John Akomfrah, OBE.

Only films produced and released between December, 2010, and December, 2011, were eligible.

Film industries fast growing

The winners will be announced at a ceremony on 22 April, 2012, hosted by Heroes star Jimmy Jean-Louis. For the first time, the awards will be held in Lagos, rather than Bayelsa, Nigeria.

"Our theme this year is Africa Rising," said founder Peace Anyiam-Osigwe. "Africa's economies are consistently growing faster than those of almost any other region of the world and our film industries are following suit. With the success of last year's AMAA winner, Viva Riva!, all of a sudden there's this great excitement about the potential of the African film industry, which is clearly demonstrated in this year's diverse nominees."

For more information, go to www.ama-awards.com.

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