Monday, 31 December 2018

Ranking My 2018 Movies


- The Year of the Strong Female Lead and the Unnecessary Pre/Sequel 

It is that time of the year again when I bore regal you with my own ranking of the 2018 films I saw within the 365 days allotted for the year. Within this timeframe, I was able to see 60 films released in 2018 both on the big and stream screens… which reminds me, I am yet to buy that 43” Smart Web TV that should improve my viewing experience on Netflix…Gofundme anyone? :D

At the end of the year I was torn between dubbing the year 2018 “The Year of the Strong Female Lead” and “The Year of the Unnecessary Pre/Sequel”. Why?

Ok so out of the 60 movies I watched, 20 featured strong female leads (N’yongo, Lawrence, Blunt, Henson, Gaga, Bullock amongst others), which I noted with interest against the backdrop of the recent #MeToo movement with some doing very well at the box office and some garnering high praise among critics and audiences alike; who says movies featuring women leads cannot do well, eh?

On the other hand, some studios basically rushed to put out meaningless prequels and sequels that failed to really move the needle on anything other than for dumb reasons like: “let’s cash in on this wave”, “I think we need to tell this story because we have the money to do this and the fans love us” which resulted in very bad movies.

A summary of the movies I saw:


  • 20 Strong Female Leads
  • 17 Sequels/Franchises/Universes
  • 12 Netflix Originals
  • 11 Book Adaptations
  • 6 Comic Book Adaptations
  • 3 Remakes
  • 2 Video Game Adaptations
  • 1 Animated Feature


So, let’s get right into it shall we? As you may be aware, my own criteria for the rankings are as follows:

  • 2018 films I watched (including Netflix Originals)
  • Entertainment Value
  • Plot/Storyline
  • Expectations Met


60. Mute

A Netflix Original starring a mute/dumb Alexander Skarsgard as a non-talkative bartender (hahahaha!) who is looking for his girlfriend in a 2030’s Berlin. Whoever told the dashing Mr. Skarsgard that his looks alone should be able to carry the film lied. Funnyman Paul Rudd was no help either as the film which has been compared to Blade Runner leaves you rather angry and mute at the end.


59. Final Score


Starring Dave Bautista, Ray Stevenson and Pierce Brosnan one would expect a lot more but Final Score is a Sudden Death wannabe without the charm of a certain Jean Claude van Damme.


58. Proud Mary




Oh, Proud Mary!!! The first film I saw at this cinema this year and with a title and poster like that I was prepared to be blown away by a gun-toting Taraji P. Henson, but Lord what a waste! After the first act the movie went south, deep south – a stupid plot with no real motives, zero depth, poorly choreographed action; the only good thing about the film was hearing Tina Turner’s Proud Mary over the gunplay.


57. The First Purge



The first of the unnecessary sequels/prequels on this list. There was absolutely no need for this film and from someone who has seen all the Purge movies with varying degrees of appreciation, this is saying a lot. Do not watch.


56. Batman Ninja

When we saw the preview over a year ago, we were amped. Team Batman vs. the villains in feudal Japan?!!! This anime-DC comic book crossover was supposed to be epic but alas in between the translation/subtitles things really felt out of sync with this one. What went wrong? I just do not know as I did not feel this at all. I am worried for the DC/Warner Bros animated features. I mean with last year’s The Killing Joke and now this?! It seems attention is shifting from the animated features which have always been quite excellent to the live features where DC and Warner Bros are trying so hard to compete with Marvel and Disney. I hope they do not regret it.


55. Skyscraper



It was tagged “Die Hard in a burning skyscraper!” Insult to the greatness that is Die Hard. Full of plot holes and contrivances, I think this was just an attempt to tap into China’s purse strings. Meh.



54. Siberia

I don’t know why I kept on watching Siberia but it always seemed like something exciting would happen in the next scene, and so on and on I went watching Keanu Reeves trudge his way through this movie, until the final scene; it was at that point, I realized that I had been had. Siberia will leave you cold.


53. The Hurricane Heist

Lampooned and lambasted, yes, I agree but I rather enjoyed this cliché of a film. The thing is I don’t mind clichés and tropes if they are well done and I think this was rather well done. It’s a heist movie taking place in the middle of a hurricane, what were you expecting? Starring Toby Kebbell, Ryan Kwanten (True Blood) and Maggie Grace (Taken movies).


52. Apostle



Gareth Evans, Gareth Evans, Gareth Evans, adored director of the two great Raid movies gives us this horror film set on a Welsh Island in 1905, that I could not wrap my head around. There were glimpses of good performances from Dan Stevens and a very good story but then again Gareth Evans, Gareth Evans, Gareth Evans.


51. Black Mirror: Bandersnatch

I do not care what anyone says but this is the worst Black Mirror story ever! At first, I thought “Oh brilliant!” but it was a gimmick and I absolutely detest gimmicks in movies. The 80’s nostalgia which has become a go-to device for filmmakers to get into the “feels” of their audiences fell flat, the multi-story, decision tree event participation was meh in my opinion, after the 9th fork in the tale I was done and I no longer cared for a resolution, I just wanted my time back! Available on Netflix.


50. Jurassic World: Fallen Kingdom

The second of the unnecessary sequels/prequels. I hated this film. It was poorly written, poorly acted (Dallas Bryce Howard cannot act to save her life), poorly paced and really so unnecessary!!! It is the dumbest of the Jurassic Park movies, yes even dumber than Jurassic Park 2! But hey, the money-making monster juggernaut continues to break box office records because who needs an intelligent dinosaur film? Michael Crichton will be turning over in his grave.

Now the 40’s…


49. Solo: A Star Wars Story

The third of the unnecessary sequels/prequels. The Han Solo story felt like a rushed job. Zero gravitas, aura, a very poor script and casting in my opinion; it is just as well that viewers, fanboys and critics felt the same.


48. The Week Of



Another Adam Sandler and Chris Rock comedy that I think was supposed to be a combination of Father of the Bride and My Big Fat Greek Wedding. Flat.


47. Nappily Ever After



I have to say that Sanaa Lathan is not particularly a very good actress truth be told so this romcom never takes one to the heady heights that romcoms do. Or perhaps it was not supposed to be a romcom but a feminist movie…hmmm? It was great seeing English actor Ricky Whittle who plays Shadow Moon in Starz’ American Gods and Lyriq Bent (Robert in Tyler Perry’s Acrimony) as the competing love interests.


46. Annihilation



Natalie Portman stars in this Netflix Original movie that was supposed to be a masterpiece but the third act was a letdown. Yes, the critics loved it but maybe it’s me but I just did not get it because I do not like movies that are seemingly pointless. Annihilation also stars Jennifer Jason Leigh, Tessa Thompson, Gina Rodriguez, Oscar Isaac and Benedict Wong.


45. Death Wish



As remakes go, this was a far cry from the original Charles Bronson movies. I love vigilante flicks but this was uninspiring.


44. King of Boys

Hmmm…what can I say about King of Boys, the story of a female powerbroker and gangster in a world of men? It was a very bold and ambitious film from our very own Kemi Adetiba (The Wedding Party) which I suspect was just satire. With a running time of over 2 hours it really stretched my patience as I was unprepared to sit for that long. It had its good parts - the very good story, the strong performances by Sola Sobowale, Reminisce, Illbliss and Adesua Wellington - but the inevitable challenges with pacing, editing and believability (oh the pseudo EFCC agents!) that beset our industry reared its head.


43. Hotel Artemis



Great premise, great first half for a movie featuring the great Jodi Foster and Jeff Goldblum somehow somehow petered out. It could have been as bad ass as Bad Times at the El Royale or John Wick.


42. Fantastic Beasts: The Crimes of Grimewald

In continuation of the “Year of Unnecessary Pre/Sequels” we have another entry. The first part was very very good, I really enjoyed it but this was just lame as even the visual effects and the wizarding world could not prevent me from leaving the theatre more confused than when I went in. Poor form.


41. The Predator

They disturbed us with this preview sha. The worst Predator movie yet but it still offered some thrills. Featuring Boyd Holbrook (Logan, Narcos), Trevante Rhodes (Moonlight, Bird Box), Sterling K. Brown (Hotel Artemis, Black Panther) and again an unrecognizable Thomas Jane (The Punisher, Deep Blue Sea).


40. Mile 22

Another gimmick. The opening scene was fire, Mark Wahlberg was in it, Ronda Rousey, John Malkovich and star of the two Raid films Iko Uwais who was greatly underutilized and a bad fit for this film. Peter Berg’s movies are either good or very bad and this was very bad.


Into the 30's...


39. TAU




I enjoyed TAU! This Netflix Original gave us a peek into what can happen in a few years with AI and robotics. Check it out.


38. Breaking In



Gabrielle Union stars as yet another strong (black) woman with kids in a home invasion scenario. Director James McTeigue does his best to make this worthwhile.


37. The Equalizer 2

There was hype and anticipation following the success of the first Equalizer movie but this did not live up to the heights of the first one and I dare to (despite my love for Denzel Washington) add this to the list of unnecessary sequels that came out this year.


36. The World is Yours



The first non-English film on the list, year! This is basically the French version of those dramatic comedies where the Protagonist-needs-to-carry-out-one-last-drug-deal-so-he-can-go-legit movies. Good performances by the lovely Isabelle Adjani, Karim Leklou and Vincent Cassel in a quite different role from what I am used to.


35. I Am Not An Easy Man

Another Netflix Original and French film! I got the heads up on this from Twitter. This is a what if fantasy movie: what if the male and female dynamic was reversed, where men are basically women and women basically men? The hilarity! Funny but still leaves one with a lot to think about. #MeToo


34. Creed II 



The prince of the unnecessary sequels this year. Urgh! I know we were all amped for it but somehow it doesn't carry the gravitas of Rocky IV. It was a bit 2-dimensional and very predictable and the drama couldn't gloss that over. Okay your papa kills my papa, so I must defeat you and I now rush into a killer ass whooping! RMEs. I never got that feel that Creed was the world champ, he wins the first time and no one rushes the stage, no "Don King" like promoter, no sponsors, no flash, no hype. Rather flat all around. The boxing match scenes were all that were great about it. Perhaps a spin-off of this spin-off featuring the Dragos will make more sense as I suspect a stronger story can emerge out of that sad relationship.


33. Gringo



The acting powerhouse combination of David Oyelowo, Charlize Theron, David Edgerton and Sharlto Copley could not make this rank higher than it would have. I think it would have been a better comedy with a lighter tone and “less known for serious roles” actors, it just did not wash.


32. Sicario: Day of the Soldado

Starring two of the hottest and grittiest men in Hollywood, Benicio del Toro and Josh Brolin, this was the king of the unnecessary sequels of 2018 as there was absolutely no need for this sequel. I got lost, figured it out and then got lost again and tried hard to tie it into the first one but no dice. It would have been better of if it was a different movie with no ties to the first.


31. Rampage

I enjoyed Rampage and I am not ashamed to say I did. The film does not really take its self seriously and no one should really. Starring Dwayne Johnson and Nega…sorry Jeffrey Dean Morgan in this adaptation of a video game it tries to steal the thunder of the monster genre and satisfyingly so.


30. Ocean’s Eight



The classic switcheroo! Instead of the boys we have the girls: Sandra Bullock, Cate Blanchett, Anne Hathaway, Mindy Kaling, Sarah Paulson, Rihanna, Helena Bonham Carter, and Awkwafina. To be honest, this was a let-down and it ranks this high because well, you know...


29. Extinction



It was a great thing seeing my man Michael Pena in a leading role but no lies, Extinction could have been better but it could also have been a lot worse. And oh yeah, the surprise twist was good.


28. Tomb Raider

The reboot of the movie adaptation of the game was fun fun fun. It was the closest thing to its original source material, the Indiana Jones movies. I did not like any of the Angelina Jolie movies and Alicia Vikander did quite well with a better origin story.


27. Pacific Rim Uprising



Giant alien monsters aka Kaijus? Check. Giant human controlled robots aka Jaegers? Check. Difficult odds? Check. Daylight battles between multiple Kaijus and Jaegers? Check. John Boyega doing his best Shai LaBeouf impression? Check. What’s not to love?


26. Bird Box



The comparisons between A Quiet Place and Bird Box were always going to be a feature. What if Bird Box came out before A Quiet Place? Hmmm. Strong casting and performances by Ms. Bullock, Mr. Malkovich and others help this Netflix Original film stay afloat on what is really a bird-brained plot.


25. Peppermint

A straight to the point revenge, vigilante movie featuring Jennifer Garner who resurfaces a few years later to take out the gangster and drug lord who killed her husband and daughter. I like.


24. The Meg



Tries very hard to be a light-hearted summer blockbuster film and it succeeds!


23. Ant-Man and the Wasp

I prefer the first one by far. This was just made to make up the numbers, have a kid friendly Marvel movie and sort of explain why Ant-Man will be in the Avengers: Endgame.


22. Bad Times at the El Royale




Tarantino meets Agatha Christie in this late 60’s set piece about a bunch of strangers with different motives for staying at the El Royale. Jeff Bridges, Jon Hamm, Dakota Johnson, Chris Hemsworth and British-Nigerian Cynthia Erivo star.


21. Calibre

A hunting trip by two friends takes a bad turn when things go horribly wrong when wrong choices are made. A very good movie from Netflix.


To the teens, those very good movies that were edged out of the Top 10 by better movies...


20. BlackKklansman



Based on true accounts: it’s the 70’s and Colorado Springs first African American Detective undertakes an assignment to infiltrate the local Ku Klux Klan. How? You’ll have to watch out to find out. Directed by the inimitable Spike Lee, it stars John David Washington who sounds like his father but does not look much like him and Adam Driver whom I am slowly beginning to like.



19. Upgrade



The critics say this is the much better Venom movie since both movies have very close similarities and star actors who are dead ringers for each other. I liked but it reminded me too much of Hardcore Henry.


18. Hunter Killer
A pretty exciting film Hunter Killer is The Hunt for Red October for this age; featuring Gerard Butler, Common, Gary Oldman and Toby Stephens (Dame Maggie Smith’s buff son).


17. Beirut



Jon Hamm’s best movie so far in my opinion. An intelligent film that tries to showcase the intrigues of espionage in the old middle east.


16. The Ballad of Buster Scruggs



The Coen Brothers live up to their billing as one of the world's best writers and directors in this series of short stories situated in the Old West. Starring Timothy Blake Nelson, Zoe Kazan, James Franco, Liam Neeson, Brendan Gleeson among others, you will laugh, cry and shake your head as you move through each one.


15. Venom

Railed against, I think we have become accustomed to over the top super hero flicks so Venom appears to be underwhelming. But what was everyone expecting? Sony delivered a very good origin Venom story and everyone gave a great performance with acceptable effects and story line. Work done = 1.


14. Deadpool 2

Deadpool 2 gave us Deadpool reloaded. The merc with a mouth lived up to the billing. With a great first act, it sort of went down a couple of notches lower and remained there the rest of the film. The closing time machine montage should be a national treasure.


 13. Nothing to Hide

Another French film based on an earlier Italian film. 3 couples and a friend who are old friends meet up to have dinner when the suggestion of a very dangerous and scary game comes up: they agree to all drop their mobile phones on the dinner table and then read out every text, instant message and listen in on every call that come in. I was shooketh.  Do not try this at home!


12. Ready Player One



Who else could direct this book adaptation that literally drips 70’s, 80’s and 90’s movies, comics, games, toys and other pop culture! Stephen Spielberg delivers in only the way he can in this futuristic film where people live out their days as avatars in a 5D virtual reality world where they earn and spend points and compete to find clues to a hidden game that gives them complete ownership and control of the virtual world. Starring Ansel Elgort (Baby Driver, The Fault in Our Stars, Divergent series) and Miles Teller (Whiplash, Divergent series) lookalike, Tye Sheridan, Lena Waithe and Olivia Cooke and T.J. Miller.


11. Red Sparrow



I think Red Sparrow is grossly underrated and should be added to the list of great espionage movies. Jennifer Lawrence is extra cold as a viscous ballerina-turned-KGB-agent who weighs her options considering the reduced life expectancy that comes with serving the Russian state.


Now those that made the enviable Top 10...


10. To All the Boys I’ve Loved Before




This is a sweet, lovely, beautiful tale of high school romance which served as a perfect throwback to all the previous sweet, lovely and beautiful high school movies we watched in the 80’s and 90’s. There is nothing wrong with this Netflix adaptation of the best-selling book by Jenny Han.


9. Acrimony



Meeeeen! WE DO NOT CARE WHAT THE CRITICS THINK! Tyler Perry outdid himself with this one! What a film! It had men and women in the audience taking sides from the start, with some switching sides half way through, with more crossing over to the other side by the end of the movie. I daresay no film shown in Nigerian cinemas has generated as much fiery discussion and debate among Nigerian men and omen as Acrimony. A daring but possibly soap operatic plot which saw Taraji P. Henson destroying her role and Lyriq Bent playing his to perfection leaving us undecided on whether to trust him or not, Acrimony deserved to make more money at the box office.


8. Mortal Engines



I was initially very skeptical and thought to myself “Oh another dystopian film adapted from a book” but really no one does fantasy quite like Peter Jackson. I really really enjoyed Mortal Engines as it is basically the way adventure films should play out. It reminded me of Willow, Never Ending Story and other fantasy films of years gone by; replete with interesting but not outlandish characters it was properly done.


7. A Star is Born



I cried, I laughed. A Star is Born, a remake of two remakes is a great movie and kudos to Bradley Cooper for making me fall in love with Ally and Lady Gaga.


6. Roma



There are directors and there is Alfonso Cuarón. Roma is not a movie, it is a visual masterpiece as only Cuarón can create. Shot in monochrome, you never really feel like you’re watching a movie but more like you’re voyeuristically being carried along as you observe the lives of Cleo and the family she serves in 1970’s Mexico.


5. A Quiet Place




This year’s Get Out. Funny man John Krasinski, follows the footsteps of fellow comedian Jordan Peele as he directs (and stars in) this hit horror film. This is the film Bird Box wants to but instead of sight, the sense affected is sound…make one sound and the frightening alien monsters will be upon you tearing you limb from limb. Instead of Sandra Bullock we have Emily Blunt with a great performance – that scene where she goes into labour with the monster on the prowl was epic. Oh yeah, we actually get to see the monsters unlike in Bird Box. See A Quiet Place.



4. Den of Thieves




Released early in the year, this was the second film I saw at the cinema this year. Starring Gerard Butler, Curtis Jackson, Pablo Schreiber, O'Shea Jackson Jr among others, it tells the tale of a gang of robbers and the hardened Los Angeles policemen on their tail and the people caught in between. The plot is mad, acting very good and sound editing out of this world. Reminiscent of Heat, I can still hear the booming of the guns during the final gun battle when I close my eyes. Oh yeah, pay attention at the end of the film.


3. Mission: Impossible Fallout



Nobody does action like Tom Cruise because to him nothing is impossible. Mission: Impossible Fallout is simply the best action movie made in years.


2. Avengers: Infinity War




The year’s watershed cinema moment. Infinity War left audiences either numb or in tears. The directorial vision of the Russo Brothers as set into motion by the great Kevin Feige was perfectly executed as the end of the first era (or third phase) of the Marvel Cinematic Universe nears. We felt Hulk’s fear, Wong’s fear, Peter’s fear, Okoye’s fear, Tony’s fear, a fear we all still feel as we patiently wait for Avengers: Endgame.



1. Black Panther



You knew it was Black Panther, didn’t you? :D

It was a tight race between Black Panther and Avengers: Infinity War, however Black Panther offered a plethora of themes that led to articles, blogs and posts being written, in addition to the new pan-African movement it generated. For the first time, a movie with a predominantly black cast about Africans however fictional went mainstream and shattered box office records and is now firmly lodged in popular culture. Besides its significance, the acting performances by everyone particularly Michael B. Jordan, Lupita Nyong'o, Danai Gurira, Letitia Wright, Winston Duke, Angela Bassett and Forest Whitaker are to be praised…they even got some accents right. Director Ryan Coogler did a fantastic job and shout out to my friend who did Letitia Wright’s hair for the film.

The real winner here is Stan Lee and may he continue to rest in peace, and yeah, Wakanda Forever!!!!


So that’s it! I hope you enjoyed reading this way better than I enjoyed writing it! Till next year! :D

Sunday, 31 December 2017

Ranking My Top Films of 2017!

Phew!! What can I say about films in 2017?! In summary, it was The Year of the Colon. Colon?! Yes, the “:” punctuation mark and that other part of the body that is responsible for making shit.

Quite a few films that came out this year featured the colon: giving us a year featuring yet again an abundance of remakes, reboots and sequels, thanks to the expansion of highly bankable comic universes. Adaptations were not left out either as they featured prominently: I mean, why create something original when you can just adapt an existing story format for the big screen, eh?

For perspective on my list we have the following:
  • 2 reboots
  • 6 remakes
  • 10 adaptations
  • 11 sequels
  • 15 original features 
 And I am happy to mention that our very own Nollywood made the cut!

So, let’s get right into it shall we? But first a bit of explaining is in order… Each time I do this I try to clearly state the criteria that guides my ranking so as not to confuse, befuddle and surprise the casual reader or movie-watcher, critic or buff as to my choice of one film over the other in a ranked listing.

So again, the criteria for the list is:
  1. 2017 films I watched (including Netflix Originals)
  2. Entertainment Value
  3. Plot
  4. Expectations Met


And here we go….

44. Mr. and Mrs.: Chapter 2
The supposed sequel to the Nollywood film Mr. & Mrs. was a mistake and I really should have known better than to allow myself be dragged to see this, but it was a slow week at the cinemas. DO NOT WATCH.


43. The Guest
We have another Nollywood flick! The premise although unoriginal made sense. it featured two of Nollywood’s hottest properties, Rita Dominic and Femi Jacobs but what began as a psychological thriller ended up as a lampoon. I mean I had talked 3 of my colleagues into seeing this. “Let’s give it a chance”, I argued. And we did, spending the last 30 minutes of screen time laughing our heads off and infecting others in the hall. No.


42. The Dark Tower
Stephen King was most definitely the content provider for Hollywood in 2017 but not every adaptation does justice to its source material. If you have read the Dark Tower books you had to be amped for the film but from the get-go I had a problem with the choice of casting: I felt that Roland Deschain’s role should have gone to Matthew McConaughey and The Man in Black to Idris Elba. Ultimately, it was the omission of Susannah and Eddie’s characters from the film that were a clear indication that this was going to be a poor one. And it was. I understand that there are talks to make it a TV series which I hope can do justice to the story of The Gunslinger.


41. King Arthur: The Legend of the Sword
Oh, the previews fooled us all! And anyone who says King Arthur: The Legend of the Sword by the great Guy Ritchie (yes, he is still great) is a good film deserves to have his opinion shoved up his/her nose.


40. Sleepless
What went wrong with this film? Featuring Jamie Foxx, Michelle Monaghan, Dermot Mulroney, Gabrielle Union and T.I. this film ought to have rocked, but star power was not enough to prevent me from wishing I had chosen to sleep instead.


39. Alien: Covenant
Ridley Scott should give up already. Why do they keep making crap Alien movies?!! Prometheus was crap and this one was just a non-event in my opinion.


38. Alakada Reloaded

YES! YES!! I went to the cinema to see this. I mean after being inundated with the previews it seemed good for a few laughs (Nigerian comedy style) and it was; a bit overdone but it did its job.



37. 1922

An adaptation of a Stephen King novella, 1922 features Thomas Jane in an unrecognizable look. He plays the role of a farmer who kills his wife to inherit her land when she insists on selling it. I expected to be terrified, but it ended up being long drawn and a rather weak horror film.


36. Security
Antonio Banderas is a former marine who takes on the job of a mall cop only for a small army of bad guys to invade the mall on his first day in pursuit of a teenage witness. Hey, its Antonio Banderas and Ben Kingsley with some other unknowns! 😊


35. 6 Days
Based on true events, 6 Days is the story of the 1980 hostage situation at the Iranian embassy in London. 6 Days features good performances by Mark Strong and Jamie Bell and Abbie Cornish as the strangest looking and sounding television reporter I have ever seen on the screen.


34. xXx: The Return of Xander Cage

It took more than 10 years and we don’t care for how his being alive was explained but Xander Cage returned to the big screen!!! I mean the first two films were made for boys and young men like me and this featured a multi-ethnic cast including Donnie Yen, Deepika Padukone, Tony Jaa, Ice Cube, Samuel L. Jackson and Toni Collette. And oh yeah, watch out for the cameo by Neymar.


33. The Mummy
The Mummy wasn’t that bad was it? It may have had one or two failings, but you guys kept comparing it to all the other Mummy movies ever made!! I dug it and I am really looking forward to the proposed “supernatural monsters’ universe”. Go Tom Cruise! 😄


32. Banana Island Ghost
Full disclosure: the producer is a friend. A very ambitious endeavour which could have been edited better for easier continuity but okay performances from Chigurl and the rest of the cast made for a few laughs. Ehen! I have never seen the Lagos lagoon looks so blue!


31. Bright

Flogged by Netflix, Bright held some promise going by the previews, but this movie was one act short of a mess. A mash up of several genres that sought to mirror existing social orders it still managed to fall flat with its ever so predictable plot. The Will Smith magic made it work for me plus Joel Edgerton did his best with the dumb script. My favourite beings were the Orcs who made the Elves look tame despite their supposed superiority. A sequel is in the offing, so it might just get better.


30. Going in Style

Three geriatrics and friends (Oscar winners Morgan Freeman, Michael Caine, Alan Arkin) decide to rob a bank that has played a part in shafting them of the rewards of their hard-working lives. Feel good stuff based on an original 1979 film.


29. Naked

Marlon Wayans-meets-you’re not good enough to marry my daughter-meets-Groundhog Day. A laugh a minute, Naked sees Marlon Wayans wake up butt naked in a lift and late to his own wedding without a clue to how he ended up there. Naked which co-stars Regina Hall, Dennis Haysbert, Scott Foley, Eliza Coupe and Loretta Devine was very entertaining and was one of the better Netflix films for the year.


28. Fist Fight

Possibly the only other film to feature Ice Cube this year, Fist Fight is the tale of two teachers who spend the last day of the school year antagonizing each other based on perceived slights leading to an after-school showdown! Fist Fight is originally refreshing.


27. Logan
What can I say? Insipid and unoriginal. I had very high expectations for the third Wolverine installment only to be met with the superhero version of every Jean Claude van Damme film since Cyborg! WTH?!!! To everyone else that said that this was not a superhero film – no, it’s not!!! Logan was sad, sad, sad and so cliché ridden, I have decided to blot it from my memory all together. It is only out of respect for Hugh Jackman and Wolverine that is ranks so highly and yes, it is the lowest ranking superhero film on this list.


26. Murder on the Orient Express



It’s murdah on the senses!!! But I am a sucker for whodunnits and Agatha Christie is the queen of them all. Throw in an ensemble cast directed by Kenneth Branagh and it passes.


25. Kingsman: The Golden Circle
More like The Golden Meh. We have had better Gold Circle ads than this film! I had such high expectations! The first part was mad!!! This one was just madness. I blame director Matthew Vaughn for succumbing to the pressure to “Americanize” what should have remained a British National Treasure. Everything about this sequel was lame…Eggsy’s relationship, Hart’s amnesia, the entire American Statesman agency and the lamest villain since Quantum of Solace’s Dominic Greene. The only character I liked was the US President.


24. Baby Driver

This should just have been called “Baby” as it had a lot less driving than anticipated. I was expecting to see an Edgar Wright twist on The Transporter or something, instead it became an artistic piece. Loved the colors and cinematography though and Jamie Foxx as a baddie. Jon Hamm did try to shine here too. Looking forward to seeing Ansel Elgort in more movies. Great plot and a remake might do it justice.


23. Atomic Blonde

Picture John Wick as a more intelligent CIA agent who goes behind the Berlin Wall to extract a database of secret agents while sporting heels, boobs and a blonde wig. Yup, that’s Atomic Blonde, a long ass movie that could have been way shorter for a better ride and more impactful plot twist at the end. Starring Charlize Theron, James McAvoy and John Goodman.


22. Spider-man: Homecoming

Our second Marvel and Superhero movie of the list and yet another reboot of the twice now rebooted Spider-man franchise. A good one and just thankful to Sony for making this happen - a Spider-man film for Generation Zzzzz…


21. Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2
This movie annoyed me…but not as much as Logan did. It is not a good sequel in my opinion coming from a first installment that made everyone forget about Avengers 2. Marvel should do better with the Guardians going forward.


And who did not make the Top 10 but made the Twenties and Teenies?...


20. War for the Planet of the Apes
Well War ran too long, the first act was ok, second meh and final cliché ridden. I slept off watching this. To be fair, the series has done better than expected and I think it's time it's laid to rest along with Caesar.


19. Kong: Skull Island

Samuel L. Jackson, Loki, Toby Kebbell, John Goodman, Dude from 24, The Walking Dead and Straight Outta Compton, Shea Wingham, an uninhabited jungle island, guns, choppers and the biggest ape of them all, King Kong! This had all the ingredients for a monster hit but still managed to be less exciting than the 3-hour long Peter Jackson one.


18. The Babysitter

LMAO! This was campy, horror schlock at its best. I loved it! The characterizations were well done with adequate build up to the horrific events of the night. Netflix and director, McG did well with this horror genre. Quite a few laughs amidst all the blood.


17. Geostorm
Hmmm…I liked the premise, again I am a huge fan of Gerald Butler, they had like 2 Nigerians in bit roles, Ed Harris, Andy Garcia, a livelier Abbie Cornish, that annoying dude from Misfits, an electric car, disaster porn and space station mishaps. What’s not to like? 


16. Pirates of the Caribbean: Salazar’s Revenge/Dead Men Tell No Tales

I am tempted to write this in lisp! The 5th PoTC film is reminiscent of the first as it goes back to the ghost story/curse plot, which endeared the first film to many before it went off on a box office bomb defying tangent which each successive instalment grating the nerves a bit more than the last. I like the story and the acting. We had mini-Elizabeth Swan and mini-Will Turner, Javier Bardiem in a very convincing literal psycho-ghost-mode and Johnny Depp doing his Jack Sparrow thing to the best of his abilities. Great visuals too.


15. Kalushi
I saw this at this year’s Lights Camera Action film festival in Lagos. Based on a true story, Kalushi is the story of Solomon Kalushi Mahlangu, a 19-year-old South African who having experienced apartheid in 1907s Soweto becomes militarized to take the fight to the Boer, his first mission and trial for murders he was found guilty of by association and the impact it had on the anti-apartheid struggle.


14. Thor: Ragnarok

Thor: Ragnarok is either a very good film or a very tepid one and I chose to go with very good. It had laughs, I got to see The Hulk and Cate Blanchett’s Hela was fire. Easily the best Thor film in the series. Thank you Mr. Waititi.


13. Justice League

I was expecting a flop to be honest but Justice League though not perfect was a solid film and provides a more than adequate platform for the Justice League movies. It is the only other bright star in an otherwise dark DC Cinematic Universe, thanks to Joss Whedon.


12. The Hitman’s Bodyguard

The Loudmouth meets The Motormouth. LOL. But The Hitman’s Bodyguard to me paid homage to all the “unlikely partners-buddie” films that they don’t make any more. It had all the trappings of good action flicks from a by-gone era and I genuinely enjoyed it. Hey, it had Samuel L., Ryan Reynolds, Salma Hayek and Gary Oldman, so yeah it was good.


11. Kidnap

The underrated movie of the year, Kidnap deserves a lot more everything good than it got. It gripped me from start to finish with Halle Berry giving one of her best performances ever as a mother on a high-speed car chase to keep her kidnapped son in her sights. Too bad the legal issues prevented this from becoming a hit.


And now the elite Top 10!


10. Okafor’s Law


I enjoyed every bit of this as it exceeded my expectations! LMAO! Great performances by everyone and kudos to Omoni Oboli for producing and directing this.

PS: I had a waka pass role in this! Erm, no you don’t see my face but at all at all na im bad pass :D


9. Gerald’s Game

I loved it!!! Carla Gugino and Bruce Greenwood were excellent! Beautifully paced, with very effective cinematography, director Mike Flanagan’s adaptation of this Stephen King novel is worthy of praise. A must-watch and really should be ranking higher on this list. A cautionary tale on why I don’t and probably never will do handcuffs in the bedroom.


8. iBoy

Based on a 2010 book by Kevin Brooks. A shooting leaves a London teenager with powers that revolve around the iPhone he had with him when he was shot. He uses his new-found abilities to hunt those responsible for the rape of his friend. iBoy is a modern and realistic take on the teenage super-hero genre involving social issues of our time. It’s so simple and yet brilliant and had me wondering why it took so long for it to be made.


7. Girls Trip

Laughs, laughs and more laughs! It lived up to the hype! It was good seeing black women winning on the big screen. I went around with a smile on my face for weeks after I saw it.


6. Wonder Woman

Take a bow Patty Jenkins! Wonder Woman achieved what DC and Warner Bros have been trying to do since the last Batman film. Wonder Woman was a spectacle, an edifice and a message which the whole world heard.


5. Dunkirk

How do you make a film that’s not just a visual masterpiece but an auditory one? How do you depict one of the most compelling stories of the human spirit in the face of death with a modicum of dialogue and do it so well, the scenes stay with you long after you’ve left the theatre? Christopher Nolan is still the man.


4. It

You know It had to be in the top 10. The film adaptation of the Stephen King bestseller was epic. The acting, the pacing, the terror all conspired to deliver what was one of my best films of the year. It was a success both critically and financially. It is what Stranger Things wants to be.


3. The Lego Batman Movie

This entire animated film was satire and a pop culture parody fest! I laughed from beginning to the end! Great work by Chris McKay, Seth Grahame-Smith and Chris McKenna. Lego Batman reminds us of two things: that although DC/Warner have struggled with the movie adaptations of their comic properties, they rule the other media (animation and TV); also, that Batman/Bruce Wayne is by far the best character in the DC universe.


2. John Wick: Chapter 2

More headshots!
More tailored suits!
More beautiful women!
More car chases!
More gun-fu!
More hand-to-hand combat!
More improbable sub-plots!
Seeing Laurence Fishburne and Keanu Reeves in the same film since The Matrix Trilogy
Common, Ian McShane and the legendary Franco Nero!
Movie orgasm after orgasm!
We love John Wick!!!


1. Get Out

Jordan Peele is the year’s money maker! A critical (99% score on Rotten Tomatoes, and yes fuck you to whomever lowered its perfect score!) and commercial hit, Get Out for me was the year’s stand out film. A simple story that meshed together several genres to serve a tongue in cheek but harsh critique of racial issues in today’s America. Get Out is the epitome of the African American man’s nightmare. With great and subtle acting by everyone, you’re tensed but you don’t know why you are and at the end you laugh is away but with a never ending, acrid vestige trickling down your throat.



So, there you have it! My ranking of the 2017 films I got to watch. Like it or not, share and leave a comment below.








Saturday, 31 December 2016

Ranking My Top Ten (…and more) Films of 2016

This time every year I try to do a ranking of all the films that came out during the year that I have seen. Each time I do this I try to clearly state the criteria that guides my ranking so as not to confuse, befuddle and surprise the casual reader or movie-watcher, critic or buff as to my choice of one film over the other in an ordered listing.

This year, in addition to Entertainment Value and Plot I have added whether the film Met My Expectations or Not as a criterion for ranking. I mean given the hype and expectations with which we welcomed the 2016 movie year there were quite a few duds that really left me hollow.

Indeed, 2016 was a below average year for movies; the army of sequels, superhero flicks and video-game adaptations. So I found “new” stories rather refreshing and will admit a bias towards them. Unfortunately, I did not see so many dramas as my year was extremely busy which is why I am honestly quite surprised I saw 50 2016 titles.

So enough jibber jabber and on to the list!

So again, the criteria for the list is:
  • Entertainment Value
  • Plot
  • Expectations Met


49. Underworld: Blood Wars
The first sequel on this list and apparently, Kate Beckinsale is the new Milla Jovovich. I fell asleep twice watching this.

48. The Jungle Book
Never liked the cartoon and the live-action adaptation did little to change that. Fell asleep once (or twice).

47. The Boss


Melissa McCarthy surprised us all with Spy last year. This is no Spy, this is a pointless movie.

46. Batman: The Killing Joke
Started out well and was quite amped for this but this is by far the worst DC animated feature ever. Hated the Barbara Gordon-Bruce Wayne love arc and the end was quite meh. I guess the writers were going for some sort of psychology themed story where we see that the Joker is ying to Batman’s yang. (No, we did not all read the comic and we don’t care, we just want to be entertained.)

45. Ratchet and Clank
Video-game cartoon adaptation. As far as animated features go this was kinda flat with zero soul.

44. Cell
This Walking-Dead-meets-Technology mash-up could have been a much better movie. Even Samuel L. Jackson and John Cusack couldn’t save this Stephen King adaptation.

43. Mechanic: Resurrection
Another sequel and probably Jason Statham’s worst film. My ex-crush Jessica Alba was as active as a mannequin throughout and the whole thing was border line B-Movie. And oh yeah, Tommy Lee Jones and Michelle Yeoh were in it. Shock! Horror!

42. The 5th Wave
I first thought, “Not another alien invasion dystopian future muck” but the more I saw the preview, the more I suspected this would be an intelligent film. I was wrong. My darling Chloe Grace Moretz wasn’t kick ass enough.

41. How to Be Single
One of the few dramas I saw this year. Great premise, good plot but somehow somehow it petered out flat.

40. Meet the Blacks


Hahaha! Zero expectations, plenty laughs in this B-Movie! Sometimes you just want some silly entertainment and this lampoon worked.

39. Bastille Day
Luc Beeson ohhh! I really tried to like this film but I guess Idris Elba’s acting was not quite it for me. Waste of time.

38. Skiptrace
Jackie Chan and Johnny Knoxville…. go figure. They tried to do another Rush Hour and Shanghai Knights buddie flick but although it has quite some heart it did not quite take.

37. Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Out of the Shadows
I prefer the first one to be honest but it was nice seeing Beebop and Rocksteady “properly” portrayed on the big screen. My kids loved it, so there.

36. Assassin’s Creed
Full disclosure: I only just played the game (Part 3) about two months ago (Trash game but my son likes it). However as a firm believer in “do not judge a movie by its book, comic, cartoon or video game I Stan’d for this film and looked forward to it when I heard Michael Fassbender was going to be in it. People, the movie is pointless. Will not be watching any sequels.

35. Zootopia
You people can hype something sha. This Who Framed Roger Rabbit wannabe was all hype jor. Well, at least the kids loved it – especially the train scene. J

34. X-Men: Apocalypse
Rubbish! Crap! I was sooo annoyed! 20th Century Fox should just give hand over the rights to Disney! This was appalling. It was like I was watching Days of Future Past -2.0. The Four Horsemen were weak! Apocalypse was so weak I wanted to die! The plot was all over the place. Nothing felt convincing. I swear the only reason why this film is this high up is my love for everything X-men.

33. Batman Versus Superman: Dawn of Justice
The only reason why this film is not at the bottom of this list is my undying love for Batman. For more please watch Hitler Reacts to Dawn of Justice here as it fully captures my thoughts about the movie. And yes, can that lady not return as Lois Lane? Thank you.

32. The Angry Birds Movie
An animated feature adaptation of the monster game. I think it was quite creative the way they told the story of the different kinds of birds and their relationship with the pigs. It’s ok to be angry sometimes.
“I like the beginning and the middle a little. I also like the part when Red said ‘ Wow. My teacher can shoot fireballs.” – my son, Tega

31. Ghostbusters
I was curious, very curious. There was no need for this AT ALL! Crappy humour, overacting made us yearn for the original. Another Melissa McCarthy and Paul Fieg subpar stuff. But we just loved the cameos by the original cast, didn’t we? J

30. Fifty Shades of Black


I won’t lie, I loved the preview. I mean it makes more sense to like the parody of a bad film based on an even worse book, eh? Marlon Wayans delivers once again in yet another lampoon of a people’s favourite. I see a lot of promise in Kali Hawk’s career; she’s a good actor and is banging too!

29. Suicide Squad
Suicide Squad was a marketing success. Warner Bros. successfully fooled a whole bunch of us into watching this film coming at the heels of the sham that was BvS. Viola Davis was the only redeeming factor in this vehicle. The jokes seemed forced and although I would admit that Margot Robbie put in quite a performance, Harley Quinn isn’t quite my thing.

28. Midnight Special
One of those movies I stumbled upon so no expectations. A supernatural sci-fi drama about a boy with unique abilities hunted by special agents, it offered a bit of fresh air albeit reminiscent of old classics like Firestarter. Michael Shannon was at his usual dramatic best with Joel Edgerton supporting quite ably.

27. Doctor Strange
It was with some reluctance that I watched this due to the #Whitewashing controversy. Great effects! Dazzling colours! And what you would expect from Benedict Cumberbatch. Madds Mikkelsen was well, mad in it.

26. Pele: Birth of a Legend


I liked this film. As far as movies about football go, it is always a hard thing to do not to talk of a biopic. But I love the attempt to portray the god that Pele is, another difficult thing about the film. Starring Kevin de Paula and Vincent D’Onofrio. It has heart and spirit but albeit falls short of what a great sports movie should be.

25. The Purge: Election Year


Better than the last one. It made sense and against the backdrop of the coming US elections was great timing. The killer teenage girls shook me.

24. The Magnificent Seven


Yet another remake. Antoine Fuqua’s attempt does absolutely no damage to the 1960 original. With some good acting by Mr. Denzel Washington, Ethan Hawke, Chris Pratt, Lee Byung-hun and Vincent D’Onofrio, together with the vistas of the old west provide a throwback of some sort to the western classics of bygone years.

23. Barbershop: The Next Cut
The feel-good film of the year! Love the positive vibes and messages this put out. It was good seeing Deon Cole of Blackish (I love his voice) on the big screen.

22. Central Intelligence
Not in the league of other Kevin Hart flicks but this was not bad at all. Funny as….

21. 10 Cloverfield Lane
A prequel (?) I must confess I did not pay as much attention to this film as I should have. It started a little slow and built up slowly which made for loss of concentration sometimes. However, John Goodman was well…good and the end was worth the previous sluggishness.

20. The CEO


Great attempt at yet another whodunit by the master of Nigerian mystery-suspense, Kunle Afolayan. The cinematography was top notch as usual and although the reveal was rather watery and I respect the daring of this film. Totally enjoyable.

19. The Brothers Grimsby
What else would you expect from a Sacha Baron-Cohen film? Irreverent and potty humour, that’s what, and I am not ashamed to say I loved this film which feature Andy Garcia lookalike Mark Strong.

18. Kung Fu Panda 3
Po and friends were grittier and tougher in this one.

17.  Eddie the Eagle


Taron Egerton is a good actor! I saw the poster and I thought “nah!” Somehow I got a copy to watch and I enjoyed every minute. This is such an inspiring story of self-belief and what the Olympics is really about – participation, as never more evident than in this year’s edition.

16. When the Bough Breaks


I laughed and laughed from start to finish. A dramatic thriller, this film made my day, no, in fact my week! Silly stuff!

15. London Has Fallen
Full disclosure:  I am a Gerard Butler fan. Dude is not a bad actor you know. Yeah, London was not as good as its Olympus but I loved the idea of it. It was fantastic watching all the leaders of the free world get popped like that, just almost as riveting as the White House being attacked in Olympus. In the end it was good fun that set the pace for many of the year’s action flicks to follow and surpass.

14. Keanu


Buddie flicks had been quite tricky to come by for a couple of years and then comes Keanu, no expectation and boom! it slide-tackles you. The misadventures of two square African American friends (Jordan Peele and Keegan-Michael Key) revolving around a cat named Keanu should be one for the ages.

13. The Nice Guys



Another “buddie flick”, yaay! Ryan Gosling and Russell Crowe star as a pair of two very different private detectives who team up to try to solve the murder and disappearance of two women in 1970s Los Angeles. I think this successfully paid homage to the buddie flicks of yesteryears.

12. Kubo and the Two Strings


Cool stuff! Thank God for film nerds on the internet for this one sort of flew under the radar. This is the best animated feature this year. Great story line, somewhat weak in the middle but essentially puts the last few adventure cartoons and films of the last few years to shame.

11. Money Monster
Directed by Jodie Foster, this one moved me. I think it was very efficiently done with Jack O’Connell and George Clooney giving good performances. I have seen films like this before but I guess this was more relatable given the recession that we have found ourselves in.

10. The Legend of Tarzan


For some reason, I really like this movie. Maybe it was the opening scene or the Tarzan vs. erstwhile Big Brother Silverback Gorilla fight but it really packed some heavy hitters – Samuel L. Jackson, Christoph Waltz, Alexander Skarsgard, Djimon Hounsou and Margot Robbie as Jane. It took one to a world of make believe and adventure, exactly what a good movie should do.

9. War Dogs
I still can’t get over Jonah Hill’s Efraim’s character laugh! What is that?! Loool. Another movie I was blind-sided by but was fun to watch. Great acting all around especially Mr. Hill’s but couldn’t get a certain “Lord of War” film out of my mind while watching this.
PS: Why is it that people in Miami, let’s just say Florida are nearly always involved in the most outlandish schemes ever? Is it the sun?

8. The Birth of a Nation


I had looked forward to this film since January and I was not disappointed. It took several years to make and I would just like to say kudos for the balls and bravery required to make it. Movies are about storytelling and this film did just that. From beginning to end I was enthralled and moved along with the story that needed to be told on the big screen. Birth of a Nation is hesitant, unsure but still riveting.


7. Now You See Me 2
Hated hated the first part! So I had zero expectations and boy was I surprised! This was more fun, more realistic and more magical. This can finally be part of a long list of good heist films.

6. Jason Bourne
Sequels galore innit? So I kinda like the Bourne series and Matt Damon and Paul Greengrass were both back in the drivers’ seat to remind us how it is done! Featuring fantastic and mad characters (Vincent Cassel? I have no words), this was a joy ride.

5. My Big Fat Greek Wedding 2
The daresay the best comedy this year. It came 14 years after the first part and although not quite the runaway smash hit that its predecessor was it still made me laugh and left a warm and fuzzy feeling in my stomach.

4. The Accountant
I almost appluaed at the end of this movie and I took back some of the bad things I had ever said about Ben Affleck’s acting. The preview did not prepare me for the roller-coaster ride that it is. Brilliant, intelligent and good acting all around, it reminds me of a time gone by in moviedom.

3. Eye in the Sky


And why this film is not No. 1 I do not know; maybe I am biased, maybe it is the fan-boy in me….yes, that is the reason. More movies like this should be made. It was refreshing with a capital “R”. I firmly believe without a doubt that director Gavin Hood evoked from me at the exact scene, every emotion he wanted to extract from his audience. Whaaat?!!! Excellent performances by Dame Helen Mirren, Aaron Paul, Barkhad Abdi and the late Alan Rickman.

2. Deadpool
I mean Deadpool was the movie to beat this year and $783m and 10 months later very few movies did. It was a dream come true of a movie and its distinct success has probably put paid to what is known as the summer blockbuster season! Irreverent, anti-heroic, potty & sexual humour-filled, slow-mo, flow-mo packed hit featuring Ryan Reynolds and Tim Miller in his main directorial debut sees Wade the Mouth put his money where his mouth is and we loved it!
Makes you forgive 20th Century Fox for messing up that other X-Men film.

1. Captain America: Civil War


Yes, I am a fan boy. Fully #TeamCap.
Ladies and gentlemen, I present to you the highest grossing movie of 2016 at $1.1bn worldwide! And my No. 1 film for 2016! First, I love what Disney or whomever did with the marketing! The digital marketing was insane! We were all made to pick sides, #TeamCap or #TeamIronMan. The various teasers tickled us, arousing our interests as we coud barely wait. The preview with the Spider-Man reveal left us in throes as D-Day finally arrived. And guess what? We were not disappointed! Great storytelling, excellent management of screen time for all the characters we love, great action sequences and effects, numerous talking points – Spider-man’s intro, Ant-Man becoming Giant-Man (I got pissed because the whole Spidey and Black Panther love overshadowed this), Black Panther the new beau (bye-bye Thor!), Bucky and Cap’s double-team on Iron Man etc. Kudos to the Russo Brothers! And I do hope Joss Whedon is taking pointers from them!


So that’s it! I am pretty sure Rogue One, Don’t Breathe and The Wedding Party would have featured in the Top 10 but alas I did not have the time to fit them in before the end of the year. Oh well, you can’t win ‘em all. L


So what do you think? Yay? Nay? Leave a comment below, like and share!





Wednesday, 16 December 2015

The Performer

John was livid. How dare she?! To bash him in front of everyone like that – both juniors and seniors! This was one of the reasons he hated this job. The monthly exercises in humiliation masked as monthly performance reviews were getting to him. It was bad enough when it came from the divisional directors but to come from her – a mere senior manager! – it irked his soul.

Was is it his fault that the market was slow? Was it his fault that the old general was voted back into power and that the people wanted change? Ehn, change had come and a slow market was part of or a result of that change. He knew his figures for last month were bad, possibly his worst figures in months. He hated this feeling. He liked the feeling that came with meeting his targets so being brought down to earth like this was humiliating.

He had hoped to just bluster his way through his presentation but she had tenaciously and meticulously pointed out gaps, questioned him on every point, admonished and made him look inept. He raged inside all through her pontificating but outwardly he kept his cool. ‘Dere Coker, she was everyone’s darling, a brilliant officer who was always winning. Oh how he would like to see her lose just once, the fall from grace would be epic. Indeed quite a number of his colleagues were looking forward to that day but so far that day had not come.

He bunched his fingers into a fist as he paced up and down the room. He was worked up and he needed to let go and relax. Next month would be better, he promised himself. He and his team were positive that pending transactions would go through. He would just have to be more bullish. He had to go see Alhaji Dutse and Chief Udechukwu, they were his hope for next month and in fact the rest of the financial year. John pulled out his phone and set a couple of reminders.

As he looked through his phone a message came in. It was from her – ‘Dere Coker. He read the contents and his annoyance increased. Aaargh!! He would have to put her in her place! Forget that she was relatively new to the organization and had won the hearts of many of the bosses including the chief executive with her performance so far; forget that she boasted a masters from an Ivy League school; forget that she knew her onions and was a hard worker; forget that she was increasingly becoming influential; he would deal with her and hurt her in ways he knew how and she would always remember the name John Adeleke.

He snapped out of his thoughts as the lock turned and the door opened. He looked up as she walked - no sashayed - into  the room with her curve-hugging blouse and skirt. His eyes turned into slits as they made eye contact, he John Adeleke and ‘Dere Coker, adversaries in more ways than one. She approached him, eyeing him as he drew himself to his full height. She stopped right in front of him, tilting her head up to maintain eye contact with this proud young man.

John looked at her, taking her all in as she glared at him.


“Why do you have to be so nasty?” he asked.

“Because you like me that way,” she replied.

He clenched his jaws looking at her and tried to control himself.

“I’m going to teach you a lesson.”

She laughed. “What lesson?”

Take off your clothes.”

She smiled at him.

 “Yes, papi. Mr. Performer.”




THE END.