African Film Explained

African Film
Frequency:Weekly
Category:Photocomics Magazine
Company:Drum Publications Ltd
Publisher:Drum Publications Ltd
Firstdate:1968-1972
Country:Nigeria
Language:English
Website:http://www.chimurengalibrary.co.za/periodicals.php?id=26

African Film was a Nigerian comics magazine, published between 1968 and 1972.[1] It was just one of the many photo comics or "look books" that flooded English-speaking West Africa in the early post-colonial era. Catering to the new urban youth, the series featured the mythical persona of Lance Spearman, a.k.a. "The Spear," a black James Bond-like crime fighter as the central character.[2] The character was portrayed by Jore Mkwanazi[3]

Content and Themes

In contrast to the racist stereotype of the uncivilised, uneducated, spear-carrying cannibal, or the eroticised "noble savage" that characterised the depictions of Africans in most Western comic books from the time, Spearman was sharp, stylish and sophisticated.[4]

Combining re-appropriated Western references with a distinctly African cultural identity, he reflected a newly defined black Atlantic modernity. Here was a comic book hero that presented a potential critique of colonialism, as well as a significant variation in how the genre classically figured normality and otherness.

Publishing

African Film was published by South African Drum Publications in Nigeria[5] and later also Kenya and Ghana in the early 60s. Although the series was criticised for its sometimes stereotyped portrayals of blackness and masculinity, it nonetheless had a lasting influence in fostering postcolonial pride and identity.[6] Its combination of extreme (often cartoon-like) violence, with pastiches of early Hollywood melodramas, dashes of romance and glamour - via the street and touches of black nationalism preceded the Blaxploitation explosion in American cinemas in the 70s and its use of inventive DIY tactics to overcome budget constraints (Spearman's trademark Corvette Stingray was often a picture of a dinky-toy) had a lasting influence on the Nollywood industry.[1]

Further reading

Notes and References

  1. Taylor & Francis Online. (9 Mar 2010). A prequel to Nollywood: South African photo novels and their pan-African consumption in the late 1960s Retrieved 6 July 2013
  2. The Palm Beach Post. (9 Aug 1970). Africa's James Bond
  3. Web site: Missing Spearman . This Day, Live . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20140326060343/http://www.thisdaylive.com/articles/missing-spearman/123840/ . 2014-03-26 .
  4. Mail & Guardian. (7 Dec 2012) The evolution of African pulp fiction
  5. Book: Matthias Krings. African Appropriations: Cultural Difference, Mimesis, and Media. 20 August 2015. 20 July 2015. Indiana University Press. 978-0-253-01640-9. 56.
  6. http://muse.jhu.edu/journals/history_in_africa/v032/32.1fleming.pdf Africa's media empire:Drum's expansion to Nigeria