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It was released on 12 April 2013 in Ghana and on 19 July 2013 in Nigeria. Though the film was met with generally negative critical reviews, it received nominations at the 2013 Golden Icons Academy Movie Awards, 2013 Ghana Movie Awards, 2014 Africa Magic Viewers Choice Awards and 2013 Zulu African Film Academy Awards. It won six awards at the ...
Before Ghana Film Industry, the government of Ghana, who inherited the film industry from the colonial government, was the only producer of films in the country. The first president of Ghana, Dr. Kwame Nkrumah , in 1964 established the Ghana Film Industry Corporation (GFIC) at Kanda, in Accra, which would become the country's capital in 1877.
Title Director Cast (Subject of documentary) Genre Notes Release date Adam the Eve: Ingrid Alabi: Majid Michel, Ingrid Alabi: September 1 Ghana Single Ladies: Joselyn Dumas, Yvonne Nelson
The story of the lives and loves of three Ghanaian women friends, [13] [14] focusing on marriage and societal norms of Ghana that are not represented in Western film. [15] Frimpong-Manso won Best Director for The Perfect Picture at the 2010 Africa Movie Academy Awards , where her films garnered a total of four awards.
Kanana, also known as Akata and Akatsa, is a 1992 Ghanaian movie produced and written by Kofi Yirenkyi. The film features BK Afandoh as Agya Ntow and Kwaku Crankson as Osuo Abrobuo. The film features BK Afandoh as Agya Ntow and Kwaku Crankson as Osuo Abrobuo.
The 2012 WIN-Gallup International 'Religion and Atheism Index' claimed that Ghana is the most religious country in the world with 96 percent of it population identifying as religious. [7] Popular religions in Ghana such as Christianity and Islam coexist with the beliefs of spirits, evil, and witchcraft illustrated in traditional beliefs.
The Perfect Picture: 10 Years Later is a 2019 Ghanaian film produced and directed by Shirley Frimpong-Manso and Ken Attoh. [2] It is a sequel to The Perfect Picture, also produced and written by Shirley Frimpong-Manso.
Zinabu was the first Ghanaian video feature, beginning a new form of indigenous film production that would grow in the early 1990s. In 1988, two video films were released, but this grew to seven in 1991, and over 50 in 1993. [2]