Isale Eko Mom Inspired Gangs Of Lagos – Film Director, Jade Osiberu
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Entertainment News
Jade Osiberu, the writer and director of Gangs of Lagos, the
controversial movie now making waves on the international movie circuit has
opened up on how a mother in a state of undress, preparing dinner for her
children in Isale Eko, where the film is set, inspired the movie.
Osiberu made the disclosure in an interview with Hollywood
Reporter via Zoom when asked what the original inspiration for the movie was.
The award-winning film director said she was inspired to write the
script for the movie 10 years ago when, while shooting a movie in the
neighborhood of Isale Eko she saw through a window a mother in a state of
undress, shouting at her children, which according to her provided the human
angle on which not only is the movie based but has made it relatable and
resonate with viewers.
“10 years ago, I was shooting in the
neighborhood of Isale Eko in downtown Lagos, for a series called Gidi Up, the
first thing I ever shot, and in this area, the buildings are very close
together, and you can see into other people’s windows. I looked in and could
see this mother preparing dinner for her children, in a state of undress and
shouting at her children.
“I felt like I was looking right into a
scene from their lives. It got me thinking about what it would be like to be
born into this life [in the slums].
“Because right next to this
poverty, surrounding it, is extreme wealth — it is right next to the big
commercial and financial center of Lagos, where a lot of banks and financial
institutions have their headquarters. People there can see this extreme
wealth, almost touch it, but it’s not their reality.
READ: Gangs Of Lagos Film; A Mockery Of Our Heritage – Lagos Government Laments
“There is a lot of gang activity in these different slums in Lagos and a
lot of gang wars as well. There’s a lot of research on it online. Over the
years, I just kept on going back to this idea of telling the story of the
gangs but not just from the point of view of fighting and violence but from
the human angle, starting with a child thrust into this life,” Osiberu
maintained.
Just as Osiberu said in that interview she did not set
out to tell the story of the gangs just from the point of view of fighting and
violence but to tell the story of the daily struggles of people and how they
live their lives in their local setting as they try to make ends meet.
She also set out to subvert the expectations of people familiar
with some certain scenes in Lagos, for instance the party scene at the end of
the movie where a fight breaks out. Perhaps that explains the reason for some
of the violent scenes in the movie.
“So the party scene was the
hardest. But I have a history with party scenes. I love the way Nigerian
parties look. I don’t like to attend them, but I love how they look. In every
film that I make, I typically have a party scene. But what I try to do is
subvert what you expect will happen. So here you have a typical Nigerian party
and then there’s a massive shootout.
Still, ever since Gangs of
Lagos, the movie which tells the story of three friends; Obalola (Tobi Bakre),
Gift (Adesua Etomi-Wellington) and Ify (Chike-Ezekpeazu Osebuka), as they try
to navigate their lives, growing up on the rough and bustling streets of Isale
Eko, Lagos, hit the screens on 7 April it has stirred a lot of criticisms from
many quarters.
The Lagos State government, while condemning it, described it as
unprofessional and misleading
because of the gang fights in the movie and the way it portrayed Lagos and the
Eyo masquerade in a negative light.
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