African film: A booming industry
Linda Klaassen and Mila Ibrahimova
UNESCO
The widespread use of new technologies, the affordability of digital film equipment, and the rise of online platforms are enabling a new generation of African filmmakers to emerge. The UNESCO report, The African Film Industry: Trends, Challenges and Opportunities for Growth, released on 5 October 2021, reflects the vitality of African cinema, driven by digital technologies.
Also known as “Nollywood”, the Nigerian film industry – which produces around 2,500 films a year – is emblematic of this growth. It has enabled the emergence of a local production and distribution industry with its own economic model. The real game-changer is the ongoing digital revolution, which started some twenty years ago and was accelerated by the Covid-19 pandemic.
Across most of the continent, however, the economic potential of the film and audiovisual sectors remains largely untapped, with the film industry continuing to be structurally underfunded, underdeveloped and undervalued. According to the Pan African Federation of Filmmakers (FEPACI), the industry generates $5 billion in annual revenue out of a potential $20 billion.
There are also challenges that persist in areas such as gender equality and freedom of expression. According to the UNESCO study, eighty-seven per cent of respondents said that there are explicit or self-imposed limitations to what can be shown or addressed on-screen.
Read more:
The African film Industry: Trends, challenges and opportunities for growth, UNESCO, 2021
African cinema: A young and relatively unknown art, The UNESCO Courier, March 1988
The Awakening of African Cinema, The UNESCO Courier, March 1962
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