Leila Djansi
Leila Djansi had some of those bitter inconvenient truths that Ghanaians hate so much to lob at the Ghanaian movie industry in the wake of Abraham Attah’s Oscar exploits.
Djansi, who is based in the US herself, warned that Attah’s burgeoning career can in no way be sustained if he stays to act in Ghana. The only solution, for her, is for the 15 year old to move his career to Hollywood, where he can consistently fight for roles.
In a note on Facebook, the filmmaker also had some strong words for the Ghanaian movie industry, which is lagging behind due to multiple factors. These she diagnosed brilliantly, and predicted that unless those are exterminated, we’ll continue to be mired in a stagnating industry with no real quality.
I think it’s Jesus who said something about those who have ears to hear…
Read her post below…
Here I go again. Anyone ready to make any videos? 3-2-1…
I am so happy for Abraham Attah. I am also sad for him at the same time. Because, unfortunately, unless Cary and co make that smart decision to relocate Abraham Attah to the US, his career cannot be sustained in Ghana. It’s Monday y’all. Award season is OVER. DONE. Roles for him are few and far between in Hollywood if he is not visible. It’s hard for child stars.
It’s exciting to see Ghanaians all excited and staying up to watch the Oscars and its kinda sad to see them make these sacrifices knowing the people they’re watching have never seen nor heard of them.
Instead of standing in the bleachers and screaming fan based shoutouts, ask for a place at the table.
Yep, Leila is too known. Someone has to put her in her place. Leila has to conform to Ghana standards, where is Stella Den-something when you need her; blah blah blah.
But when you stand outside the crowd and you see the HUGE opportunity to advance that they’re missing, you weep. I would LOVE to be in Ghana and make movies from there and be close to my family instead of here in America where you don’t know when some trigger happy cop is going to off you cos you’re black. But the way some of us make films, Ghana cannot sustain us. I cannot hire a crew of 50 people, a cast of 100+ and not be able to make any money back or have them good/skilled enough for a smooth flow production.
You want to see Ghana films travel? how about telling ourselves the truth and stop throwing tantrums when someone does?
Let us be honest. We make terrible films. (I do too). Let us learn how to tell stories and tell them well. Let us tell honest stories. Not forced ones, but stories that hit close to home. Look at films from Francophone Africa. Honest stories have legs.
The Academy is changing it’s rules and going for diversity and inclusion. Africa deserves a place at the table. Not at the fashion and party table with the kids, but at the grown up table. But… we are going to have to put in the work.
The oscars are closer than you think. Ask Abraham and Lupita.
Posted by Leila Afua Djansi on Monday, 29 February 2016
This post was published on March 1, 2016 8:33 AM
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