But that is what
happens when an otherwise good venture is hijacked by a people
dedicated to feeding fat on ignorance and vulnerability. So, when
Prince Aderopo eagerly goes for the white man's education, the freedom
knowledge gives is tainted by the sexual exploitation a Reverend
Father subjects him to. If he must become human again, he must be
cleansed. So, just as his forefathers would have done, a girl must die
for each of the number of years he was abused; in a land where all
young girls must remain virgin till wedding night, they must die at
the point of deflowering for a befitting cleansing.
That is how the
multiplier effect of exploitation ruins generation after generation.
Ask the Almajiris, victims of a feudal system that keeps many poor so
the few rich can feed and manipulate them. Don't ask them, because
they do not even know. But the Ogoni people know, the many youths
whose money-making time coincides with electioneering know and like
it or not, Boko Haram insurgents now know. Just listen very
well to their speeches. The real tragedy is not that many virginal
Nigerians die daily, it is the fact that survivors wake up each
morning to the possibility of dying, while the few Inspector Waziris
and Sergeant Afonjas run aground.
Meanwhile, by the
time Inspector Waziri solves the riddle, he has experienced what it
means to be a black man working for the whites: they keep calling him
“Danny boy.” He is also an Hausa man working in Yorubaland, and
sees what the seething tension between the ethnic groups can cause if
left unattended to. For instance, an Nyamiri kills an Aboki,
who must have killed his daughter, in the land of Ofemandu.
Therefore, when the Union Jack comes down on October 1 and the
Green-White-Green rises to kiss the sky with pride, Waziri's emotion
is inscrutable. But we know he cannot, dares not, be optimistic.
Today's Nigeria justifies that priceless look on his face. For before
the colonial master left, he had taught us to favour the privileged
few and trample on the rest: anyway, whatever arrangement suits their
purpose is just fine.
Afolayan keeps raising the bar in quality production. He overreached
himself in recreating the temporal and physical setting of this
feature film. Millions must have gone into getting those vintage cars
and household items: that gramophone! His cinematographic abilities
and creativity we have come to take for granted.
However,
synchronisation is an issues that cropped up in, at least, two
instances. First is when the Prince dances to music from the
gramophone. At a point, his steps are in dissonance with the music
beat. Again, when his last ritual sacrifice is interrupted by the law
closing in, the beauty of his jump and roll out of the “shrine”
is tainted by a split second hesitation. Then again, there is the
slip in line 5 of the old National Anthem: it is “Nigerians all and
proud to serve” and not “Nigeria all am proud to serve.”
Reference to tribes carries no‘s’ even in the plural sense. So
you cannot have ‘Igbos.” It is Igbo, Yoruba, Hausa, Esan,
Itsekiri, and so on. I stand to be corrected, anyway.
These “mistakes”
could easily have been corrected. But you can never know with
creative artists. Each of these flaws is striking. So Afolayan might
have deliberately created them. If he did, then he knew October 1 would be pirated just as Nigeria's Independence Day was pirated by a people only
interested in link roads and strategic economic moves.
And, although
Afolayan is a great actor, I wish he could resist the temptation of
acting in his movies. You cannot be the best in interpreting certain
roles. Getting what you want out of your cast is part of what makes
you good. If it is a case of cost cutting, then no wahala.
By the way, for a
first-timer, at least on the big screen, Demola Adedoyin gave a good
account of himself. His freshness was delectable. Let us wait and see
how he turns out after money bags make him do seven movies in a week
(some of our actors and actresses proudly claim such feat, thank
you.) But my star is Sergeant Afonja. His delivering (in words and
action) is priceless. His look, when Prince Aderopo says “Kudos,”
is worth a million Dollars. Each time he says“Epeto,” his
sincerity of purpose dares you to laugh. He is a successful foil to
Inspector Dalandi.
They are both
officers of the law in service of a country they love. But where
Afonja is earthy and culture-conscious, Dalandi is the quintessential
professional, who expects every thing to go by the books. However,
between them is a devotion that helps them transcend mutual suspicion
largely inevitable between people of different tongues. It is this
link that helps them rescue the situation.
The beauty of the
arts is that it lend itself to multi-layered interpretations and
different meanings. So, until we come to terms with who pirated
October 1 and ask the person why, we are still very far from righting
all the wrongs. A people as loving, industrious and blessed with
natural and human resources as Nigerians deserve a better life. For
only a society alien to African communal tradition will allow
pirating of a good thing, while the rightful owner has no house in
Asokoro or Lekki; does not ride a Jagaban or marry models. That is what happens in a pirated independence.
Let us continue
to bear our cross, lamely agree with the Prince when he says
Nigeria’s “independence arrived 10 years too early,” and
pretend we have not heard of a people saying enough is enough and
matching words with action. It is “Our suffering motherland”
anyway, in spite of all 40 basic natural resources that can make any
country a superpower.
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