Showing posts with label West Africa. Show all posts
Showing posts with label West Africa. Show all posts

God Calling (2018 Movie)

Saturday, May 22, 2021

A heart-wrenching, dramatic, imaginative piece. 


The Rundown

Behind the name: Apply literal interpretation

Country: Nigeria, 2018 

Genre: Melodrama

Production: Heart in Motions Pictures

Director: Bodunrin Sasore

Cast: Zainab Balogun (as Sade), Seun Ajayi (as Tope), Nkem Owoh (as Papa Francis), Onyeka Onwenu (as Mama Francis), Richard Mofe-Damijo (as Sade’s father, Tina Mba (Sade’s mother), Chidinma Okebalama (as Anna), Shawn Faqua (as John), Eku Edewor (as Asa)

Compare to: Road to Yesterday (for the drama)

Hate it or Love it? Appreciate it


Synopsis in a Sentence: A mother with a drug addiction experiences a deep tragedy in her household, and then God calls... 


On Writing: The Plot

The story goes from conventional to catastrophic in a single act… in terms of the case depicted, not the writing. The writing is fairly good and really atypical for the Nollywood space. And the melodrama is brave and daring. It explores themes of faith, addiction, mental and emotional health, family, and purpose. Now that’s a load for a modern Nollywood production! For the uniqueness of the angle, an imaginative piece.

But be warned, the story peaks fairly early, and then descends slowly, in an otherwise slow burn… without the explosive boiling point. 

(3/5)


On Acting: The Cast 

A good one.  

Overall, the cast is believable, and for the theatrical concoction that attracts Nigerian productions, that’s a very good thing! 

Zainab Balogun is the lead of the film, Sade, and she delivers her character very well. A great improvement since her first appearances on the big screen, and we’re all here for it! 

Seun Ajayi is Tope, husband to the lead and he’s good also, a decent portrayal of the character. 

It’s great to see Nkem Owoh play Papa Francis, and Onyeka Onwenu deliver Mama Francis, and they’re a great act in their typical (perhaps typecast) roles. 

Richard Mofe-Damijo is, of course, the wealthy father, and Tina Mba plays his partner, and the mother of Sade. Same same the roles go. 

Chidinma Okebalama is Anna, Shawn Faqua is John, and Eku Edewor is Asa in this movie. 

Overall, a good cast, overall some convincing acting. Overall, not entirely remarkable. 

 (3.5/5) 



On Production: The Creativity

Production is very clearly the star of this film! It’s shot absolutely stunningly, and out-rivals any of the best Nollywood productions, perhaps ever! 

The creative filming, editing, and cinematography weave perfectly into the story, and in fact, enhances it. Honestly, throughout the film, while other elements threaten to weaken the movie and its delivery, the visual language, tone and special effects salvage it all! 

Director and writer, Bodunrin Sasore delivers some stunning shots, vibrant visuals, and compelling effects. Some well deserved praises go to him, and the entire production team behind the scenes who never quite get enough credit for all the work they’ve wondrously accomplished!

(4/5)                                              


On Resolution: The Conclusion

It ends alright, and the conclusion may be surprising to some, but even a melodrama needs an up-tick, right? The question is; is it? 

(3.5/5)


The Verdict: A well-produced melodramatic piece. An overall good watch, for its fairly unique premise, all with very good production sequences.  


Overall Score = 14/20




Review - Namaste Wahala (2020 Film)

Sunday, April 25, 2021

 Was fairly keen on watching this Nollywood meets Bollywood production! 


Loose Translation = Hello Trouble!


The Rundown

Behind the name: Hello Trouble!  

Country: Nigeria, 2020

Genre: Rom-Com

Production: Forever 7 Entertainment 

Distribution: Netflix

Director: Hamisha Daryani Ahuja

Cast: Ini Dima Okojie (as Didi), Ruslaan Mumtaz (as Raj), Richard Mofe-Damijo (as Earnest), Joke Silva (as Shola), Sujata Sehgal (as Meera), Ibrahim Suleiman (as Somto), Frodd (as Raymond)

Compare to: Chennai Express

Hate it or Love it?  Entertain it


Synopsis in a Sentence: A Nigerian girl and Indian guy literally collide on a beach and fall into instant love, and of course their families have no chill




On Writing: The Plot

The story is really, honestly corny. The concept is cool and could be fun, but somehow, doesn't quite land. Could it be the feigned depth? The premature sprint into love? The trite opposition of their families? Whether the culprit is one or all of these, the plot is quite unexceptionally delivered. 

For being the first of its kind though, and for reflecting the marriage of cultures that Nigerian-Indians have been able to create over time, it deserves recognition. 

(3/5)


On Acting: The Cast 

A fairly good cast, but overall, underwhelmingly delivered action. Because it is corny. But oh well! 

Ini Dima Okojie is Didi, and she’s believable as a love-interest, but hardly so as a lawyer. Is it her lines? The plot? The lack of depth of her character? What more can be said? Still, she is interesting to watch. 

Ruslaan Mumtaz is Raj, the male love interest and he’s alright, yet some delivery is… corny. Could it be the lines or the unbelievable jumps his character is forced to make into love? Who knows? Eye candy to watch though. 

Richard Mofe-Damijo is lawyer-father Ernest, and by now, he’s played this 100 times so… is it trite? Still, he is believable. 

Joke Silva is sophisticated mum, Shola and of course, she’s great. Could be the ace of the production. 

Sujata Sehgal makes her Nollywood debut as Meera, and she’s quite good as the Indian mother protecting her son from… the unknown… yet our introduction to her performance lacks the intensity it needed to be convincing. Otherwise, a good delivery overall. 

And 2019 Big Brother Nigeria contestant, Frodd, makes his big-screen debut as Raymond, a convincingly entitled loser-brat! 

Overall, a good cast who unfortunately falls victim to an undeveloped plot line… 

 (3/5) 



On Production: The Creativity

Production is fair. It’s quite alright and loses itself in some cases, but it’s certainly not all bad. Perhaps it’s the best thing the movie has offered yet.. but then it’s not. 

(3.5/5)                                              


On Resolution: The Conclusion

It ends with the expectation that there will be a part two, because there is hope that this movie can redeem itself with a sequel that captures the wahala, and fun, of a Nollywood-Bollywood-Indian-Nigerian wedding! 

(3/5)


The Verdict: A lukewarm, underwhelming, yet fairly light-hearted watch.  


Overall Score = 12/20








Movie Review: Merry Men 2: Another Mission (2019 Nollywood Film)

Thursday, December 12, 2019

Got invited to the premiere of this movie and it was a great watch!

 
A step above its predecessor! 


The Rundown
Behind the name: Based on Robin Hood’s outlaw gang
Country: Nigeria, 2019
Genre: Action, Comedy 
Production: Corporate World Entertainment & FilmOne Entertainment
Director: Moses Inyang
Cast:   AY Ayo Makun (as Ayo Abioritsegbemi), Ramsey Nouah (as Ayo Alesinloye), Jim Iyke (as Naz Okigbo), Folarin Falana AKA falz (as Remi Martins), Ireti Doyle (as Dame Maduka), Damilola Adegbite (as Dera Chukwu), Rosy Meurer (as Kemi Alesinloye), Alex Asogwa (as Calypso), Williams Uchemba (as Johnny), Ufuoma McDermott (as Zara), Nancy Isime (as Sophie Obaseki), Regina Daniels (as Kenya) & more
Compare to: Merry Men, The Real Yoruba Demons 
Hate it or Love it?  Watch it



Synopsis in a Sentence: A crew of four friends brought together by the idea that stealing from the rich to “give to the  poor” try to straighten their ways, but soon realise that once they sleep with the dogs, they have to deal with the fleas that come with them... 

On Writing: The Plot
The plot is clearer, more  engaging and overall relays a much better storyline than the first! 
With a slightly better exposition than the first movie, we get insight into the lives of the crooks, and what motivates them, and why we should actually like them. 
The climax is also better, some pieces of dialogue are funnier, and the rise and fall of the action is a step above the previous one; an overall upgrade on this front!
(3.5/5)



On Acting: The Cast 
The cast is, quite star-studded, and the characters are clearly written for the personality each actor brings. 
Here are the Merry Men: top comedian AY Ayo Makun plays the role of Ayo Abioritsegbemi, playboy and co ring-leader of the gang. Then there’s veteran actor, Ramsey Nouah, who plays Ayo Alesinloye, co-ring leader as well. Old school actor Jim Iyke plays pervie friend, Naz Okigbo, and talented musician and political commentator, Falz, AKA Folarin Falana plays Remi Martins, the techie, and we get introduced to comedian Williams Uchemba, who plays Johnny, the rival techie. 
And amongst others, including Francis Duru, who is chief investigator and  Damilola Adegbite who is investigator Dera Chukwu, we have Ireti Doyle, who is Dame Maduka AKA the villain AKA the devil. And she, quite honestly, carries the movie and relays the most believable character yet! A top performance! (3.5/5) 


On Production: The Creativity
The production is quite, maybe, the star of the whole thing; we get to see Lagos, Abuja, city life in Nigeria, and it’s quite well done. We get a few shots of creativity with the action as well, and the humour is quite well infused, so overall, production is well done! 
(4/5)                                              


On Resolution: The Conclusion
Alright. So. We are likely to get a part 3. 
It resolves nicely but there are a few hangs… does the villain go scott free, or does she finally lose her luck? Will the marriage ever happen? Can the merry men really stay out of the easy, glitzy life of crime they’ve come to know and love? All these lead us to believe that there's likely to be another movie coming, but for this movie’s resolution, it is quite alright! 
(3.5/5)


The Verdict: An upgrade from the previous movie! A more enjoyable watch


Overall Score = 14.5/20