Chineze Anyaene has resigned as the chair of the Nigerian Official Selection Committee (NOSC).

Advertisement

NOSC is the organisation recognised by the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences (AMPAS) to select and subsequently submit movies from Nigeria for onward shortlisting to compete at the Oscars which holds annually.

In October 2022, NOSC was beset with a heated crisis as its leadership voted to not enter any Nigerian movie for the International Feature Film (IFF) award category of the 2023 Oscars after weeks of internal conflict.

This resulted in a protracted altercation with filmmakers who felt their movies had a shot at being shortlisted.

Advertisement

Anyaene, who founded NOSC, has now resigned from her position as the chairperson of the selection committee.

Her move, a press release from NOSC confirms, is coming days after she secured an AMPAS re-approval of NOSC.

The development also comes as Nigeria and the rest of the world prepare for the 96th edition of the Oscars to hold in 2024.

Advertisement

NOSC said the new leadership of the committee will be announced in due course.

On her resignation, Anyaene spoke of her early days as a young filmmaker when she attempted to submit her film for consideration at the Oscars in 2012, only to discover that Nigeria had no constituted committee for submitting.

“This discovery fueled my determination to create and personally finance a committee for Nigerian films to compete at this prestigious level of international cinema,” Anyaene said.

“In recent years, NOSC’s mission evolved from merely submitting films to promoting and fostering the creation of high-quality Nigerian film entries.

Advertisement

“The focus shifted towards encouraging a collaborative effort within the industry, where personal interests were set aside for the greater good of the Nigerian film industry.”

Anyaene constituted NOSC in 2012 and got AMPAS’s nod to screen entries to represent Nigeria in the IFF category.

The committee was re-approved in 2019, at which time it submitted the filmmaker Genevieve Nnaji’s ‘Lionheart’.

‘Lionheart’ was eventually disqualified for not meeting the non-English dialogue criteria.

Advertisement

However, AMPAS later succumb to NOSC’s advocacy for the recognition of Pidgin as a local language in 2020.

This amounted to the acknowledgment of dialogues in Nigerian Pidgin as a non-English fit for the IFF category.

In 2021, Desmond Ovbiagele’s ‘The Milkmaid’ made history as the first Nigerian film to be approved by AMPAS to compete in the IFF category of the 93rd Academy Awards.

The film, however, did not make the final shortlist.

Advertisement

In 2023, due to the internal crisis, NOSC failed to submit an entry for the second consecutive year.



Copyright 2024 TheCable. All rights reserved. This material, and other digital content on this website, may not be reproduced, published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed in whole or in part without prior express written permission from TheCable.

Follow us on twitter @Thecablestyle