The British Nigerian director Akinola Davies Jr. and his brother Wale were both toddlers when their father died. As adults, they could hardly remember him. Then Wale had an idea for movie. What if, by some movie miracle, they had gotten to spend a day with their dad?
In ''My Father's Shadow,'' the Davies brothers pay tribute to him in a shattering father-son tale set across such a day in Nigeria. The film, Akinola's directing debut, has gone on to become one of the most acclaimed films of the past year, making history at the Cannes Film Festival and winning awards around the world.
A powerfully autobiographic work resonate with memory and loss, ''My Father's Shadow'' is the culmination of more than a decade's worth of the Davies' brothers wondering. Wale first sent Akinola a script in 2012. Wale had never before written a movie script; Akinola had never read one.
''With zero context, he sent it to me and I just had this real emotional reaction,'' Akinola Davies said in an interview at last year in Cannes. ''I actually cried when I read it because I had never conceived of the idea of spending a day with my father and what we would say to him and what he would be like.''
In the film, set over a single day in Lagos in 1993, ''Gangs of London'' actor Ṣọpẹ́ Dìrísù plays the father, Folarin. At the family's home outside Lagos, the young brothers (Chibuike Marvellous Egbo and Godwin Egbo) return home to unexpectedly find him inside. They hardly ever see him — he works in Lagos — but Folarin takes them along on a trip in the city that will be revelatory for the boys.
It's set on a pivotal day for Nigeria, when democracy is hanging in the balance. Having taken power in a coup, Gen. Ibrahim Badamasi Babangida refuses to accept the results of a democratic election. ''My Father's Shadow'' evolves as not just a conjured portrait of Davies' father, but of a national moment of hope. In both cases, the dream is fleeting.
A first for Nigeria
At its Cannes debut last May, ''My Father's Shadow'' made history. It was the first Nigerian film in the festival's official selection, a milestone that Nigeria, a country with its own large film industry, nicknamed Nollywood, celebrated with a new presence at the global cinema gathering.