Sabo Kpade

Meet The Nigerian New Wave Director Behind the Film ‘Kasala!’

Ema Edosio is the director of “Kasala”, a comedy set in present day Lagos and

centers on the lives of four young men who go on a joyride to a party in a Honda

Accord one of them has taken from his boss Taju without permission. Their

evening is ruined when one of them crashes Taju’s Honda breaking the windscreen

and denting the car’s body. With just four hours before Taju returns home, all four

boys hustle around Lagos to raise money for the car repair.

Taju, who is a struggling butcher, is faced with a big problem of his own: his

debtor has just given him an ultimatum to pay back money he’s long owed. Bitter

and frustrated, Taju’s retribution will be double-fold, if he returns home to find

his Honda is damaged. The four friends do not need more another reason to

expect the worse from Taju if they’re not able to fix his Honda before gets home

in the next four hours.

“Kasala” is a vivid portrayal of contemporary Lagos and a riotous combination of

physical comedy, inventive turns of phrases combined with fluid camera work and

committed performances from some of the young and bright African acting

talents.

Written by Temi Sodipo and directed by Ema Edosio – who is also the

cinematographer and editor – “Kasala” was chosen for the closing gala of the2018 edition of Film Africa in London this November, out of a total of 39 films

from 15 countries.

Director Ema Edosio flew into London for the film’s UK premier at the Rich Mix

cinema to a largely pan-African crowd who lapped up the rollicking comedy.

Ahead of her trip to the UK, Okay Africa spoke to Edosio about her debut feature,

the joys and challenges of shooting on location in Lagos and the rise of Nigeria’s

so called “Naija New Wave” cinema.

The fast pace and energy in Kasala is constant all through the film. Was this a

deliberate injection or did it come as a result of the writing?

I worked as a video journalist for the BBC and I would go into the streets of Lagos

to film, and I would see everything that made Lagos what it is: the traffic, the

smell, the dirt, the vibe, the energy, the people. And I wanted to make a story

that is authentic and that is the reason why I decided to make Kasala this way.

All the four friends and main characters jell naturally it would seem. How did

you get them to work well together?

When I conceived of the film, I knew that I didn’t want to work with any “known”

faces. I knew that I wanted unknown actors. So I put out an audition call and

these boys worked into the room and I told them to read together. And

immediately it was like magic.

Why do you think they’re largely unknown to the majority of Nigerian movie

watching audience?I think one of the reasons is there’s not a lot of movies written about young

people. Most of the scripts are for a certain kind of male character: the

superhero who goes to save the damsel in distress, and the hunk and a lot of roles

are not written for these amazing actors and that’s why they’re largely unknown.

Tomiwa Tegbe who plays “Effiong” is a good comic actor and has been in “On

The Real (Ebony Life TV)” and “Shuga (MTV)”. What does Kasala bring out in

Tomiwa Tegbe that these other directors and film material that do not?

The thing that made Tomiwa Tegbe and the rest stand out in Kasala is that I gave

them freedom to act and I wasn’t micromanaging them. They became very

comfortable in order to do their best to the film.

The cast as a whole is largely new and young with Jide Kosoko easily the most

experienced. Why did you cast him for the role and not yet another

“unknown” face?

The reason is I couldn’t afford to hire known faces to work in the film and I

honestly didn’t have the budget. I [also] wanted to bring in a sense of familiarity

and that is why I got Jide Kosoko. Even though they’re guys are unknown, and

they’re are fantastic “here is someone you know who is in this movie playing with

these amazing actors” which is why I worked with Jide Kosoko.

The different locations in the film are those of back corners, mechanic

garages, meat market, communal flats most of which have the red and brown

of rust and decay gives the cinematography a visual harmony. How much

attention did you give to finding the right locations?

I think I made Kasala with a vengeance. I’ve had the privilege to work with

Ebonylife tv which was beautiful but Kasala kept pulling me in: the people I metin the streets, the things I’d done on the streets of Lagos, the visual aesthetic

kept pulling and I decided to make that. I wanted to see Lagos, I wanted to see

barbwires. I wanted to see gutters, I wanted to see the people. I knew that the

location was a character on its own. And I wanted to be able to find the right

location that would be able to represent that boys and the lives they live in

Lagos. I’m forever grateful for the people there who let us film there.

Your camera adopts the often frenetic pace of the film and is rarely still for

long. Why this visual approach?

I’m very influenced by Guy Ritchie, Edgar Wright, Spike Lee and Martin Scorsese.

And I would always say to myself that “these characters in their films can be

Nigerians”. I think that the camera should be fluid, breathe, move with the

audience showing us “oh yeah this is a wide, oh yeah this is a close up”. My

influence by these directors was what I put into Kasala. And this is what made the

film dynamic.

Are there any interesting, unplanned events during shooting which you could

share with our readers?

Shooting in Lagos is one of the hardest thing to do. You have these agberos [louts]

who come to you and literally want to take your equipment. I went with a very

small crew and I’m very petite and they would see me and say “who is this small

girl? She doesn’t have money. Leave her alone, let her shoot”. I started bringing

them into the film to act and it was very beautiful seeing them react to it. One of

the most interesting things is the children in the estates [on location] who act in

the film, the joy and the playfulness. In some ways we brought back some joy and

some fun into the neighbourhood.Did you worry much about what may be lost to foreign audiences who may not

be clued up the pidgin English and “Nigerianisms” used in the film?

You can’t come to Lagos and make a film about the slum in English. I felt like the

pidgin English was as important as the location. My mind was not about where the

foreign audience would accept it or whatever. My mind was “how do I make a film

that is authentic to Nigeria? How do I make a film that would show of Lagos?” It

would do no justice to use English.

Who are the other key players in Nigeria’s “nu wave” film and tv you would

like to highlight?

When you talk about new wave key players you’re talking about Abba Makama

whose film “Green White Green” inspired me to make “Kasala”. CJ SeriObasi,

ImoEmoren, Jade Sholat Siberi, Kemi Adetiba. So many new directors are

springing out nollywood. And they’re new directors making amazing stuff. I’m

really really excited about the future.

How did you raise the funding needed to make “Kasala”?

When I wanted to make Kasala, it was not the kind of story people would fund. I

decided in order to bring this story to live, to use the skills I’d gained over the

years—to produce, direct, shoot and edit. Not because I wanted to be in control,

because I didn’t have the budget. That is the sport of new director coming in

now. We’re fighting against all odds and it is now beginning to be clear that it’s

way beyond nollywood. Kasala has been to over 20 international festivals and

counting. And there an audience for our films, there’s an audience for our

voices.What are you expectations for it at the festival?

I really don’t know what to expect. I just hope that they love the film. For the

Nigerians in the diaspora,I hope that it brings back memories of Lagos. For black

people I hope it gives them a sense of how we are back home to help them

connect with us as Africans. For the foreign audience I hope that they see a

Nigeria of passion, of community, of tenacity, of brotherhood of love.

Leave a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Scroll to Top