“Juju Never Caused The Downfall Of The Ghanaian Movie Industry” – Ola Michael Asserts As He Reveals The Real Causes

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Chris Osei
Chris Osei
The writer is Osei Chris Kofi. I have three strong passions in life — football, blogging and movies — in that order. I love spending time with friends talking about the important things in life and hate nothing more than ‘authority’ and hypocrisy. My personal believe in life is that once an individual sets his/her mind to achieve something, it is totally possible. And oh!, I am a strong Lannister, because I always pay my debt. For writing or fixing gigs, contact oseikofichris@gmail.com.

The discussions about the issues that caused the downfall and literal collapse of the Ghanaian movie industry seem never to end.

After a recent interview by renowned Ghanaian actress Portia Asare where she suggested that the collapse of the industry was largely because of the decision of some people to allegedly use juju (black magic) on their colleagues because they felt they were doing better than them.

READ ALSO: My first car accident was caused by juju in the movie industry – Kalybos alleges (Video)

During a discussion about this suggestion on UTV’s United Showbiz show on Saturday, August 11, 2024, popular movie director and producer, Ola Michael argued that Portia Asare’s claims are quite false.

According to Ola Michael, there are a lot of factors that caused the downfall of the movie industry, but the supposed use of juju because some actors would be the least of them.

He mentioned that one of the biggest things that caused the troubles of the industry was how the producers kept releasing a lot of movies into the system when the consumers were the same people.

READ ALSO: Details Of Why Sarkodie’s Performance In Paris Failed To Happen Surface Online

The current host of Near FM’s Midmorning mentioned that at a point, the Kumawood industry, for instance, had producers releasing about 20 movies into the system, and all these movies were part 1 and 2.

He added that it was not too logical because the people who were buying the movies were quite small and at the point they got fed up, the industry started to collapse.

The second argument he made was that the industry failed to catch up early with the trends because at the time some countries were producing movies on DVD tapes, the Ghanaian industry was still stuck on CVD, which did not give the movies the best quality because on how the monies were compressed on it.

Watch Ola Michael speak in the video below for more:

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