Nollyween: Christian Chika Onu’s Karishika, with Seek & Find

Nollyween: Christian Chika Onu’s Karishika, with Seek & Find

Still from Karishika, directed by Dr. Christian Chika Onu.

Nollyween: Christian Chika Onu’s Karishika, with Seek & Find
Screening and Afterparty at École du soir Workroom
Date
November 2, 2024, 7pm
École du soir Workroom
195 Chrystie Street #600A
10002 New York New York

Please note: this event takes place offsite at École du soir Workroom, 195 Chrystie St #600A, New York 10002. RSVP is highly encouraged. 

The African Film Institute at e-flux is pleased to host Seek & Find for an off-site screening and afterparty for the restored Karishika (1998), a classic film directed by Christian Chika Onu, featuring Becky Ngozi Okorie, Bob-Manuel Udokwu, and Sandra Achums. The screening will be followed by an in-person conversation with the director. 

Seek & Find is a film restoration and redistribution collective dedicated to locating and restoring rare films of cultural value. As such, Seek & Find is excited to announce the re-release of Nigeria’s most famous Nollywood horror classic, Karishika. Many may remember Karishika as the beautifully frightening character of their youth during the boom of Nollywood film creation in the 1990s and 2000s, and we are delighted to bring her back to life in 4K. If you have yet to meet Karishika: come feast your eyes on her beauty, and marvel at her terror! What better moment to debut the re-release of Karishika in New York than November 2nd, Day of the Dead? For the living as for the dead, food and drink will be provided, along with an Afro-House DJ set by AMICHI.

Through friendship and connection, Seek & Find (artist and architectural designer Dubem Aniebonam, filmmaker and film archivist Roger Peters Blanc) formed agreements with a range of directors and producers to acquire master tapes for some of Nigeria’s most historically significant horror films. These include Karishika (1998), End of The Wicked (1999), Nneka The Pretty Serpent (1994), and Sakobi: The Snake Girl (1994). Nollyween (“Nollywood” + “Halloween”) serves as the inaugural event of this ongoing restoration initiative. It is an invitation not only to imagine but also to practice and support the rehoming of African social life, cultural ingenuity, and profound creativity in the face of material degradation by the encroachment of industrialized aesthetic uniformity.

We look forward to sharing our loving restoration of this iconic film and we hope to see you there.

For inquiries addressed to the African Film Institute, please write to africanfilminstitute@e-flux.com

For general and press inquiries, contact program@e-flux.com.



Accessibility
The venue is located on the sixth floor, accessible via elevator. Step-free bathrooms are available in the space.

Category
Film, Music
Subject
Africa, horror
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The African Film Institute

Christian Nyampeta is an artist living in New York from where he organizes programs, exhibitions, screenings, performances, and publications, which are conceived as hosting structures for collective feeling, cooperative thinking, and mutual action. Nyampeta is the convener of Boda Boda Lounge 2022-2024, a trans-African film and video art festival. In New York, Nyampeta convenes the African Film Institute at e-flux in Brooklyn.

Dr. Christian Chika Onu is a seasoned and legendary film director, writer, and actor who set the groundwork for Nollywood’s Golden Age (1990s–2000s) and wrote one of the most definitive books on the subject, The Unusual Story of The Early Years of Nollywood. As a pioneer of the movement, he has won numerous awards for his work and has a directorial oeuvre of over 300 films, with Karishika being one of his most beloved and most feared. His work has captured the hearts and minds of Nigerians for decades and he is considered an international icon of Nigerian cinema.

Roger Blanc is a filmmaker and film archivist who has been working in both industries for nearly a decade. His artistic sensibilities verge on the abstract and avant garde, and his archival specialty is in VHS restoration. When his partner, Dubem, and her siblings introduced him to the wonderful world of Nollywood, he realized the opportunity therein: the opportunity to preserve an often overlooked yet gargantuan cinematic history by performing some of the first restorations of some of Nollywood's classics. Together with Dubem, the two took it upon themselves to transition Seek & Find into the film restoration endeavor it is today.

Dubem Aniebonam is a Nigerian-American artist and architectural designer living in New York City. Her minimalist, geometric artwork is inspired by traditional African symbolic art and writing as well as her education in fine art and architecture. Her connection to Nollywood films began in her childhood, with nostalgic memories of listening through her bedroom floor way past bedtime as her parents enjoyed loud, dramatic, and entertaining Nollywood films late into the night. She grew up watching these films with her family and adored the immense creativity and has always been excited to share these films with friends. Within the last few years she's been revisiting the hundreds of video tapes living in the basement of her childhood home, recognizing the greatness of Nollywood that needs to be shared throughout the world. She's excited to work with Seek & Find to restore and bring the greatness of vintage Nollywood to the American stage, to share it with the limelight of a larger international audience.

AMICHI is a production project and collaboration between musicians and collectors, Amit and Chi-chi Barua. The couple, now based in Brooklyn, NY, fuses their palate together with sounds spanning careers working in the background at recording studios around the city. Their sets are rooted in bass and kick heavy tracks, flirting with futuristic themes and tribal rhythms to craft meaningful sets for anyone looking for an escape on the dance floor. Their online radio show, AMICHI Time, offers a more intimate look into their soundscape, consistently highlighting soulful, intimate, and psychedelic music to make their listeners feel held and connected.

The African Film Institute aims to create a home and a place of intimacy with African cinema in New York, through developing gradually and organically a viewing program animated by fellowships; a growing library; an active writers’ room; and an expanding catalog of recorded dialogs. The African Film Institute draws from the visual cultures that view cinema as an evening school: a popular information system in the service of education, aesthetic experience, and public dissemination—employing a methodology concerning the use of cinema’s collective production, and investing in viewing methods informed by different uses of time, visual and textual histories, and social struggles and hopes in mutuality between their own locality and the world at large. The African Film Institute is convened by Christian Nyampeta and hosted by e-flux Screening Room.