The Supreme Price – Extended Trailer
Produced and Directed by Joanna Lipper (Gucci Tribeca Spotlighting Women Documentary Award, Africa International Film Festival – Best Documentary. Nominated: Grierson Award – Best Historical Documentary, African Movie Academy Award – Best Documentary) The Supreme Price is a feature length…
Produced and Directed by Joanna Lipper
(Gucci Tribeca Spotlighting Women Documentary Award, Africa International Film Festival – Best Documentary. Nominated: Grierson Award – Best Historical Documentary, African Movie Academy Award – Best Documentary)
The Supreme Price is a feature length documentary film that traces the evolution of the Pro-Democracy Movement in Nigeria and efforts to increase the participation of women in leadership roles. Following the annulment of her father’s victory in Nigeria’s Presidential Election and her mother’s assassination by agents of the military dictatorship, Hafsat Abiola faces the challenge of transforming a corrupt culture of governance into a democracy capable of serving Nigeria’s most marginalized population: women.
Excerpts From Reviews:
“Taking a long historical view of a troubled country struggling to emerge from a military dictatorship is Joanna Lipper’s documentary “The Supreme Price,” about Nigeria’s female-directed democracy movement. After a military coup in 1993, M. K.O Abiola, a pro-democracy leader who was considered the victor in aborted presidential elections that year but never took office, was imprisoned in 1994. Four years later he died under suspicious circumstances. After his imprisonment, his fearless, eloquent wife, Kudirat, took over the movement’s leadership, but she was assassinated in 1996. The history is told through the eyes of their daughter Hafsat Abiola, a Harvard-educated crusader for human rights and democracy who now leads a movement to dismantle the country’s patriarchal structure.” – The New York Times https://www.nytimes.com/2014/06/12/movies/human-rights-watch-film-festival-the-25th-edition.html?_r=0
“African Cinema: Top Five Political Films – The Supreme Price…combines daring reporting with behind the scenes access and dramatic archive footage through some of the country’s most unstable periods. A fascinating history lesson of a nation still struggling to emerge from military rule.” – The Guardian
“Ms Lipper has used previously unseen archive footage to great effect with the story moving effortlessly between past and present, talking heads and footage from the campaign trail, personal moments and public opinions. There are moments of terrible sadness… But Ms Lipper just as deftly includes moments of surreal comic horror… The themes are heavy: murder and injustice, in a country ravaged by oil money and military rule. It hardly sounds like a recipe for an uplifting film, but Ms Lipper has been careful to ensure that the story is more about going forward than dwelling on the tragedy of the past… it is surely a good thing that a film like this now exists, touching on the issues the kidnappings brought to life and showing how important women are to a country like Nigeria and why it is in everyone’s interest to listen to them.” – The Economist
“‘The Supreme Price’ is a Door to Africa’s Recent History.” – The New York Times
“The Supreme Price may sound like a metaphorical title, but after seeing this strong, forthright documentary, you’ll understand it’s the literal truth.” -Los Angeles Times
“Patriarchy rules, and yet, according to Lipper’s lively documentary, the robust movement for political and social reform is driven by women which is both remarkable and to be expected in a society where women are schooled in submission and excluded from public life.” – Variety
“Excellent… Lean, lucid… No hashtag activist, Lipper does an excellent job of using her film as a vehicle for the voices and concerns of Nigerians, and especially of Nigerian women, who are traditionally expected to stay at home while men operate in the public sphere.” -Village Voice & LA Weekly Critics Pick
“In her latest film, Joanna Lipper dives into the crucial fight to educate women on a local and global scale…. Lipper presents a comprehensive look at a complex history and masterfully weaves an evocative story of politics, justice and women’s rights that will undoubtedly resonate with viewers worldwide just as the April 2014 schoolgirls abduction has.” – BET
“The Supreme Price is a deeply profound and beautiful experience, and an integral film to watch.” – Indiewire