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Halloween in Nigeria | Zikoko!
  • 2023 Nollywood Characters That’ll Make Interesting Halloween Costumes

    If you’re thinking about joining the Nigerian Halloween train this year, you don’t need think too hard about what to wear. We’ve done the work and you can now express yourself, recreating some Nollywood characters we’ve on screen this year. 

    Check for your style below.

    Agemo (Jagun Jagun)

    Agemo is easily one of the most popular film characters we’ve seen in Nollywood this year. Agemo can appear and disappear. Although she’s a scary killing machine, Agemo is almost as fast as Flash. She moves swiftly in her local floating adire and ofi with a mask that has lasers as eyes. 

    Asabi (Ijakumo)

    This film received different reactions, but one can argue that its protagonist, Asabi, was a unique character. Her outfit choice is why she’s also the most outstanding character in the film. Asabi wore only black gowns and carried a dread longer than the 3MB. 

    To be honest, wearing this as your Halloween costume will likely slow down your movement due to the long dread that’ll drag after you, but maybe you’re built differently. Who knows?

    Ogundiji (Jagun Jagun)

    Say what you want about Ogundiji, but that man had the flyest fits; from his war apparels, the plain fur coats and caps to the bead accessories — no warlord or jazz man has this man’s steeze.

    Kareem (Gangs of Lagos)

    Get your danshiki dress, dark shades, panama hat, one gold chain and two gold rings and you’re set. Thing is, not everyone will pull off Kazeem’s look without breaking a sweat, especially when you factor in his scary aura and personality. But it’d be dope if his character was recreated for Halloween.

    Okalandu (NKEMAKONAM)

    It’s very likely people will run away or avoid you if you’re in the Nkemakonam deity costume. For starters, it looks like a masquerade regalia. Consider this costume as repping your long-gone ancestors.

    Monsters (Ile Owo)

    If this is your Halloween costume, know that you’re going out as something closer to the devil and other monstrous creatures with horns. Don’t forget that an underwear is the only piece of clothing this one has, and crawling is also part of the personality.

    Girl gang (Chronicles)

    This is easy to recreate. Sew a big choir robe, buy a ski mask, and a toy gun. Your “holy armed robber” brand is set.

    The people of Iyi (Mami Wata)

    Getting your face painted in white and making hairstyles that look like satellites or any object of your choice may make you look like a stranger in a foreign land. But at least, you’ll look more African than others. Can’t hate this.

    Yejide and Awele (Battle on Buka Street)

    This is an extra for you. You can run with any of the two rival characters here. Or better still, hold your best friend and act like competitors throughout your Halloween party. But make sure to carry your big pot, a bag of yam flour, a turning rod and other identifiers of a Buka boss madam.


    You made it here, my friend, Now can you get your Burning Ram Meat Festival ticket? November 11th is closer than you think o.


  • Just Imagine: Visiting a Nigerian Haunted House for Halloween

    It’s Halloween, and you decided to make the mistake of visiting the haunted house you read about last week. Big mistake, but here’s what happens. 

    In your best Buhari costume, you get there, and the first person you meet at the door is this woman: 

    You assume she’s an usher but just as you’re about to pass, she says, “Can’t you greet? Or do I look like your mate? Oloshi oloriburuku! Disrespectful child”.

    You quickly utter a “Sorry ma. Good morning ma”, and walk inside. The haunted house tour hasn’t even started, and you’re already afraid. 

    You walk further in and enter a shrine, where a babalawo is making incantations to wooden statues on the ground. He gestures for you to come. 

    You look back as if he’s not talking to you.

    Babalawo: Come, my son, let me show you your future.

    In your mind, you’re like, “Ehn. Which future? God abeg o, abeg”. But it’s all part of the haunted house act (obviously, it can’t be a real babalawo now), so you enter the shrine. He points to a small brown stool for you to sit on.  

    Once you sit, he brings a live chicken and moves it around your head while reciting incantations. You fret but remind yourself that this is just an act. You don’t expect anything to happen until you see the mirror beside you start to blink. A video appears in it, of you ten years into the future. You realise you’re about to see what lies ahead for you and begin to shout, “Blood of Jesus! What is this?” You stand and run out before the video shows whether you’ll make it in life or not. 

    You run into a dim hallway, looking for the exit to this hell hole. What were you even thinking, coming here? In a room to your left, you see Patience Ozokwor about to swear for a family member she doesn’t like.

    You take a few steps to your left, and almost stumble into Clem Ohameze sacrificing his grandfather for a few billions.

    Before he notices you and decides to offer you instead, you tiptoe away from there as fast and quiet as possible. “How the hell do I get out of this place?” is all you’re thinking about.   

    A Nigerian aunty with white powder on all over her face (because that’s how Nigerian ghosts look) pops out from the corner. She says, “Daniel, when will you marry? Look at your age mates, where is your own?!” How does she know your name? 

    “Ah. I’ve entered it today! Who sent me message?” You do the sign of the cross and utter a small prayer as you move further into this Nollywood horror movie you’ve entered. Before you even take five steps, a middle-aged Nigerian uncle in white trad and a cap pops out from another corner. He stretches his hand to you and says, “Daniel, send me your CV. Let me see what I can do.” 

    The haunted house is going above and beyond to traumatise you, and you’re not even sure what to expect anymore.  

    The next rooms waiting for you:

    In one room, your boss is seated, ready to discuss extra work hours for the same pay.

    In another, your landlord asks you for his service charge.

    In the third one, there’s a visa office where the officer denies your Canadian visa request.

    This is you after passing these rooms: 

    Then for several minutes, nothing happens; no scary rooms or people popping out of nowhere. As you move further, you see a bright light ahead. Yes, you’ve gotten to the exit. 

    You walk faster just in case these people’s brains decide to touch, and they choose to lock you in here forever. As you get there, you realise you’ve just entered the worst place a Nigerian could ever find themself. A place of stress, tears and suffering.  

    Of all the scary places this damn haunted house could choose from, they chose… Lagos traffic!


    ALSO READ: Zikoko Hack: How to Scare Nigerians 

  • QUIZ: What Should You Dress as for Halloween?

    Halloween is around the corner, and this simple quiz will help you choose the best outfit for you.

  • QUIZ: What Should You Dress Up As For Halloween?

    Take this quiz before you waste your time to put together a Halloween outfit that won’t fit you.

    Thank us later:

  • 7 Scary Nigerian Things You Can Dress As For Halloween This Year

    If the year 2020 has taught us anything, it’s that real life is way more terrifying than anything fiction has to offer. With that in mind, I made this list of real-life scary Nigerian things you could go as for Halloween.

    1) A Nigerian Politician

    Literally anyone. All you need is an agbada, a cap, incompetence, and pure unadulterated wickedness. Also, if anyone asks you a question while dressed up as a Nigerian politician, you have to lie stupidly.

    2) A Canadian Citizenship Rejection Document

    Can you think of anything more terrifying than the thought of never leaving this country and getting to experience what normal life is like?

    3) Food Inflation

    Brethren. A sachet of tomato paste now costs N180. A kilo of turkey is almost N3k. Eventually, we won’t be able to cook that Jollof we keep making noise about.

    4) Traffic

    I know what you’re thinking. “Traffic isn’t scary. It’s just super inconveniencing.” Well, if you spend your entire life in Lagos, that’ll mean losing a large chunk of your youth to traffic. And if you’re unlucky, you could die in it.

    5) A Nigerian Government Youth Empowerment Program

    You could go as any one. They’re all incredibly disappointing. Here’s a list of them we recently compiled.

    6) An Older Nigerian Demanding Respect Even Though They’ve Done Absolutely Nothing To Earn It

    Ugh. Those ones are the fucking worst.

    7) The Life Expectancy Of Nigerians

    The current life expectancy for Nigeria in 2020 is 54.81 years, a 0.58% increase from 2019. Ain’t nothing scarer than the fact that everything in this country is trying to kill you.

    [donation]

  • It’s bad enough that some Nigerians insist on getting dressed up for Halloween. But for the 5th year in a row, some of you are going to dress up as olopa. Instead here’s a list of Nigerian/Nollywood inspired Holloween costumes you could pick from.

    Liz Benson as the ghost in Diamond Ring.

    If you don’t know who she is and you haven’t seen Diamond Ring go and do your homework.

    Alex Usifo as Beelzebub in ‘End of the Wicked’.

    You remember that part of the movie where he drinks ‘blood’, just a carry a calabash full of zobo as your own prop.

    Literally any character from Papa Ajasco.

    In fact, you and your squad can go as the whole cast.

    The one and only Baba Sala is also a great option.

    If you don’t know who is you are wrong. Skim through his legendary life and career here.

    Aki and Pawpaw from ‘Aki na ukwa’.

    In fact, Aki and Pawpaw in any movie you’ve seen them works great.

    When they caught Alamieyeseigha dressed as a woman.

    Are we the only who thinks this deserves a Nollywood movie of its own?

    Bisi from ‘I Need To Know’. If you happened to go to ISL just dig up your old uniform.

    Or you could even go as Jenifa straight out of Ayetoro.

    You can pay tribute to musical icon, Baba Fryo with his iconic star-shaped eye patch.

    The fact that he gave us ‘Dem Go Dey Pose’ is reason enough for you to.

    Wale Adebayo as Sango in ‘Sango’.

    Even though nobody could ever come close to owning a character as well as he did, you could try

    If you wanted to go as a slay queen, go as Rita Dominic from 2005.

    Nobody did it better that year.

    Get some black paint, a hat, t-shirt and jacket and you are ready to go as Baba Suwe.

    Don’t forget the gold chains.

    In the spirit of Halloween what was more terrifying than Ayamatanga from ‘Ultimate Power’.

    Who else is still terrified by this movie?

    What’s more perfect than the witches from Koto Aiye for you and your girl squad

    #SquadGoals

    If you were to go for Halloween in a Nigerian or Nollywood themed costume, who/what would you go as?