Nigeria’s government is asking cinemas to stop showing a science fiction film, District 9, that it says denigrates the country’s image.
Information Minister Dora Akunyili told the BBC’s Network Africa program that she had asked the makers of the film, Sony, for an apology. Ms. Akunyili says the film portrays Nigerians as cannibals, criminals, and prostitutes.
An actor from the film said that it was not just Nigerians who were portrayed as villains. The Malawian actor, Eugene Khumbanyiwa, plays a gang leader with the nickname of Obasanjo, also the surname of former Nigerian President Olusegun Obasanjo.
The film is about alien refugees who set up home in a South African shanty town called District 9. It is a loose allegory about apartheid and recent violence by South Africans against foreigners.
Ms. Akunyili said that the District 9 movie clearly took aim at Nigerians. “We feel very bad about this because the film clearly denigrated Nigeria’s image by portraying us as if we are cannibals, we are criminals,” she said. “The name our former president was clearly spelt out as the head of the criminal gang and our ladies shown like prostitutes sleeping with extra-terrestrial beings.”
The information minister said she had ordered the Nigerian National Film and Video Censors Board (NFVCB) to ask all cinemas to stop showing the film and to confiscate it. “I have also formally written to Sony Pictures Entertainment, the company that produced this film, demanding an unconditional apology for this unwarranted attack on Nigeria’s image,” she added. She also said she had asked them to review the film with a view to remove “all offending portions that injured our image as a nation”.
Ms Akunyili said Nigeria was now hitting back with a policy of “rebranding”, after allowing the international community to define the country based on the behavior of “[a] few criminals”. She said that Nigeria’s Nollywood film industry was also being pressed to help portray Nigeria in a better light.
However, Mr. Khumbanyiwa said Nigerians in the cast did not seem worried by the portrayal of their country. He suggested that the film, which depicts people wanting to eat aliens to gain the superhuman powers, should not be taken too literally. “It’s a story, you know,” he said. “It’s not like Nigerians do eat aliens. Aliens don’t even exist in the first place.”
Source(s): BBC News



#1 by Cleo Bonny on January 11th, 2010
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Cleobonny Cleo Bonny. DEAR Nigerians, brothers, sisters, friends, mothers, fathers, leaders. Lets read, read and read. The movie district 9 is a small issue but at least its proud art coming from Africa. Art is portrayed in both negative and positive form. If all nigerians can start reading and encourage all Nigerians youth to read in schools so that we can disapprove what is been portrayed in District 9. Cleo Bonny has done that. Google search ‘Cleobonny’
#2 by Kathy on January 11th, 2010
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To “Cleobonny”, your comment makes absolutely no sense. What exactly are you talking about? How does “reading” relate to so-called “proud art”, which was clearly offensive to Nigerians?