ALL-ROUND THESPIAN SHIFTS TO FILMMAKING
By
Margaretta wa Gacheru (posted 24 May 2021)
Ever since
2014 when the Kenya government ruled that the local broadcasters had to screen
at least 60 percent local materials for their programming, the country has
witnessed a flood of fascinating films and sit-coms all produced, directed and
scripted by Kenyans themselves.
Among those
who have combined all three, scriptwriting, producing and directing short films
is Martin Kigondu. Best known for being a playwright of scripts such as ‘Who’s
Your Daddy’, ‘Of Cords and Discords’ and ‘Matchstick Men’ among others, Martin
began making the transition to filmmaking even before the COVID lockdown. But
given that his fourth short film, ‘Contained’, addresses the effects of the
lockdown on everything from relationships and family life to mental health and
domestic violence, Martin has clearly drawn inspiration from both the trials
and triumphs of Kenyans’ everyday lives.
“It took me
a long time to get into filmmaking,” says the thespian who started his
professional acting career when he joined the Travelling Theatre that stages set
texts and caught the theatre ‘bug’ in the process.
“I resisted
[making films] because I’m devoted to live theatre, especially after working
with committed thespians like Millicent Ogutu, Gilbert Lukalia, and Keith
Pearson,” says Martin who cultivated his directing and producer skills while
working with professionals like these.
But when he
started teaching Performance and Theatre arts to children in schools like Rose
of Sharon Academy, he began recording their performances as a learning tool.
“’Red Carpet’,
my first film, had a cast that was almost all children,” he says, noting he
scripted a story that related to the delicate topic of a girl getting her
period while in class. “It hasn’t been released to a wider public,” Martin
adds.
But it was
less than a month ago that he released, through his new production company
BeeYond Entertainment, his latest short film entitled ‘Contained’. Inspired by
both the COVID lockdown and the passing of a dear friend, ‘Contained’ is just
19 minutes and has very little dialogue. But it reveals a wide array of issues
that have deeply affected Kenyans during this pandemic.
“Kui’s
passing hit me hard, but ultimately, it had a cathartic effect on my writing.
It convinced me that storytelling is so much a part of me that I can do it as
well with filmmaking as I can on stage,” he says.
Crediting
his cinematographer, Jackson Kangethe, who also helped him make two of his
other films, ‘Sand Castle’ and ‘Gatarashini’, Martin says he was delighted to
make ‘Contained’ with Akinui Oluoch.
She and
Martin co-star in a playful yet poignant story of lovers living in close
quarters during the lockdown. Initially they illustrate how a loving, happy
couple can find limitless things to do and share even in the narrow confines of
a one-bedroom flat. But the sudden turn of events is something the public
should see for themselves as they now can do by finding Martin’s channel on
YouTube.
Akinyi also
co-stars in Martin’s 2019 film, ‘Sand Castle’ in which she is married to Bilal
Wanjau’s character. “The idea was to illustrate the impact that divorce can
have on children,” he says. The breakup of the parents in his film isn’t
physically violent. But the emotional violence affects the delicate minds of
the children quickly and cruelly. The little boy () and his big sister () both
are traumatized, making the film serve as a modern-day morality film. Not that Martin
moralizes in a preachy or pseudo-religious sense. But the message comes clear,
that parents need to think twice about the delicate beings they bring into this
world. There’s an implicit responsibility there, and in his ‘Sand Castle’ one
has the sense that modern-day marriage in Kenya is as ephemeral as the sandy
mounds that children make which get washed away easily and assuredly once the
tide comes rolling in.
The other
recent short film that Martin made, assisted by Kangethe, is ‘Gatarashaini’
(‘At the small bridge’ in Kikuyu). It’s a comedy of sorts. It’s also a contest
between the manamba (matatu conductor) boyfriend (Collins ‘Ayrosh’ Irungu) and
the father (Stephan Kimani) of the tout’s girlfriend (Edith Kanini). The father
disapproves of his young daughter’s infatuation with the tout. But the daughter
prefers the guy to her dad, which makes the dad look like he’s in a losing
battle.
Again, ‘Gatarashaini’
is a short film, just eight minutes, but Martin is a master at packing in
emotions, experiences, and visual anecdotes in small spaces of time.
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