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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]
O Le Ku is a 1997 Nigerian romantic drama film produced and directed by Tunde Kelani. It is an adaptation of Prof. Akinwunmi Ishola's novel of the same name. It was released in 1997 by Mainframe Film and Television Productions . [ 1 ]
Tunde Kelani (born February 26,1946), popularly known as TK, is a Nigerian filmmaker. In a career spanning more than four decades, TK specialises in producing movies that promote Nigeria's cultural heritage , particularly that of the Yoruba . [ 1 ]
Bobbleheads: The Movie – released on home video by Universal Studios in December 2020. Foodfight! – released on DVD in the United States on May 7, 2013. Lego: The Adventures of Clutch Powers – released by Universal Studios in 2010. Bionicle: The Legend Reborn – released on home video by Universal Studios in September 2009.
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Koseegbe was Tunde Kelani's third film and his first work with Akinwunmi Isola. It started out as a stage play of the same name by Isola who was unable to write the script for film, so Kelani gave him the script for Driving Miss Daisy to use as a sample. [5] It was released on VHS in 1995. [6] It was listed as one of the 10 best selling Yoruba ...
Ti Oluwa Ni Ile (English: The Land is the Lord's) is a Nollywood Yoruba drama film sequel directed by Tunde Kelani. [1] Released in 1993 through Mainframe Films and Television Productions, the film was Tunde Kelani's debut film as a film director. [2] It was made in 3 parts and listed as one of the 10 best selling Yoruba movies. [3]
Kelani’s style of movie production salutes the past, recognizes the present and captures the future". [19] Beatriz Leal Riesco of Okay Africa concluded: "This screen adaptation of Femi Osofisan’s eponymous novel harnesses all the ingredients of the present-day Nigerian epic: witchcraft, melodrama, corruption, soccer, and love.