Success they say, is a journey..............
Following the success of The Wedding Party, the ELFIKE Film Collective, a partnership between EbonyLife Films, FilmOne Distribution, Inkblot Productions and Koga Studios decided it was time for a sequel, The Wedding Party 2: Destination Dubai.
The second film shifted its focus to the groom’s brother Nonso who accidentally proposed to Deardre,
setting off a chain of intriguing events in a tone that showed that
love truly is a universal language that breaks through cultural
barriers.
Guardian Life Magazine sat down with some members of the lead cast – Enyinna Nwigwe, Daniella Down and Ikechukwu Onukaku, as they discussed the process of making the movie and more.
Read excerpts from the interview below:
Enyinna Nwigwe
Ikechukwu Onunaku
On landing his role, learning his lines and how similar his character is to him: I’m
used to performing and learning lines, but this was different. Not only
was I surrounded by A-list actors but a lot of them I knew of and
revered as legends, so it was very necessary to bring my A game.As much
as I read that script over and over again until it was time to shoot,
nothing stuck. I did all my real learning on set. I get the question a
lot like how much of Ikechukwu is in Sola and I’m like Sola is
Ikechukwu, not in its entirety but there’s a lot of Ikechukwu in Sola.
On the most interesting reactions he got from his role: I
didn’t know you can act. Bad guy, so you’re soft like this. Ah eyaa, I
feel sorry for your head, just slapping you anyhow anyhow. You should
beat Banky.’ The slapping was real and we did it about eight times.
On gong to see the movie with an open mind and zero expectations: Just
go in to have a good time. Know in your mind that you’re going to be
entertained and you’re going to have a good time and you’re going to see
more in the second one than in the first. Don’t make comparisons. Just
take it the way it is.
I don’t want to get into the whole culture, interracial marriage and
the Igbos and Yorubas were well represented but where were the Hausas
and the Efik and all that. It’s not about that. We are really one nation
whether people like it or not and we should be able to celebrate that
all the time even if we feel like our own certain tribes were not
involved.
Daniella Down
On the challenges she faced during the production of the film: With
any large-scale project like this, there are always unforeseen
challenges that come up from things not being available location-wise or
something technical going wrong. But, in Nollywood, they are very good
at fixing problems. Cultural nuances and differences are always going to
be there in every film industry but I think the cool thing is that
everyone is telling really interesting stories. It’s incredible what we
can create if the story is good enough.
On working in Nollywood: Just the other day, I was
reading a Dutch newspaper and there was a double-paged spread all about
Nollywood. It’s really good that people are noticing. I think you can
tell that Nollywood is really starting to take itself seriously and it’s
putting a lot more time, energy and money into creating more polished
productions overall. There are so many incredible stories to be told
from here that are interesting to an international audience.
On Nigerian’s welcoming attitude: I’ve met so many
awesome, funny, talented people with great energy. I’ve never felt
anything but welcome. You do not normally see or hear about such
cross-cultural stories in Hollywood, according to Daniella, stories that
she would like to be a part of “that are kind of real, down to earth,
funny, gritty, sad, terrifying, and of wonderful things that happened.
Creative Team
Creative Direction: @themadamezeta
Photography: @jerrie_rotimi
Styling: @nkemokorafor
Makeup: @eyesome_beauty
Hair styling: @beautyace7
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