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National Film and Video Censors Board in Nigeria; Movie and Television Review and Classification Board in the Philippines; General Commission for Audiovisual Media in Saudi Arabia; Board of Film Censors in Singapore; Singaporean television rating system; Film and Publication Board in South Africa; National Media Council (United Arab Emirates)
The Independent Television Producers Association of Nigeria (ITPAN) is the umbrella body of Media professionals in the Nigerian Media and Television Industry. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] The association was established in 1992 by Chief T. Oloyede, Steve Rhodes and Alex Oduro.
The Foreign Language Film Award Committee oversees the process and reviews all the submitted films. Following this, they vote via secret ballot to determine the five nominees for the award. [6] Below is a list of the films that have been submitted by Nigeria for review by the Academy for the award by year and the respective Academy Awards ceremony.
The functions of the Nigerian Film Corporation include: The production of films for domestic consumption and export; The establishment and maintenance of facilities for film production The encouragement of the production by Nigerians of films through financial and other forms of assistance The provision of facilities for training and archiving of film, sound and video materials, like the Shoot ...
The National Broadcasting Commission is the broadcast regulator of the Federal Republic of Nigeria.The commission was set up on August 24, 1992, by Decree 38 of 1992 later amended as an act of the National Assembly by Act 55 of 1999 and now known as National Broadcasting Commission Laws of the Federation 2004, CAP N11 to among other responsibilities, regulate and control the broadcasting ...
Mainframe Films and Television Productions (usually known as Mainframe Studios or Mainframe Films) was a film production company founded in 1991 by Nigerian cinematographer and film producer Tunde Kelani. [1] [2] Since its establishment in 1991, the production company had produced several notable Nigerian films. [3] [4] [5]
The number of Nigerian video films registered in 2000 almost doubled the 1999 value, with 712 films. It continued to further increase in 2001 through 2002, with 974 and 1,018 respectively. It then reduced once more to 761 in 2003. Number of video films from Nigeria reached all-time high in 2005, with the number of films registered reaching ...
New Nigerian Cinema or New Nigerian Cinema era (also known as New Wave [1] [2] or controversially as New Nollywood [3] [4]) is an emerging phase in Nigerian cinema, in which there became a major shift in the method of film production, from the video format, which came about during the video boom, back to the cinema method, which constituted the films produced in the Golden era of Nigerian ...