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Nollywood | Page 13 of 42 | Zikoko!
  • Chike on the Hardest Scene He Had to Shoot in “Gangs of Lagos”

    Chike on the Hardest Scene He Had to Shoot in “Gangs of Lagos”

    Chike is booked and very very busy. Since the release of his 2020 debut album, Boo of the Booless, the singer has kept the engine running with video after video, a surprise EDM remix album, massive hit singles, the release of his 2022 sophomore album, The Brother’s Keeper, and appearances at almost every wedding in the country. But with Jade Osiberu’s Gangs of Lagos, Chike is set to make his feature film debut, making the already busy singer an even busier actor. 

    Gangs of Lagos, Amazon Prime’s first Nollywood feature, follows three friends played by Tobi Bakre, Adesua Etomi-Wellington and Chike, as they navigate life, and well, gangs in Lagos’ notorious Isale Eko. With political elements playing a strong factor in the film, it seems like kismet when I chat with Chike mere days after the disappointing elections in Lagos state saw thousands of people disenfranchised and hurt. 

    “You can’t preach democracy and force at the same time,” Chike explained when the topic of the elections came up. “I kept hoping that maybe this time we’d get it right, but there are still a lot of people who don’t want the betterment of the country.” 

    But elections can’t dampen the feeling of being a leading man as Chike gets into the process behind his big screen transition, the pressure to match the genius of Boo of the Booless and why he named his latest album, The Brother’s Keeper

    Source: Chike

    Tell me everything you can about Gangs of Lagos and what you thought when Jade hit you up to join the project

    If Jade calls you for a project, you jump on it because you know it’ll be good. I’d already worked with her on a project I can’t talk about before she asked me to do Gangs of Lagos. I guess I delivered on that one, so she decided to give me something more challenging. I remember being impressed by the script and having questions about how we’d pull off such a large scale production, but then I remembered it’s Jade, and she always puts out the best projects. 

    I play Ify, a carefree guy who’s kind of naive…I’m trying to tell you what I can without giving away too much. He’s surrounded by love from his family and friends in Isale Eko, but bad things happen to him as a result of his naivety. He’s just a guy trying to navigate life on the streets. 

    What was the most challenging part of shooting the film? 

    I won’t spoil it for anyone, but a very emotional scene in the movie really got to me. I didn’t have any lines or anything, so I just had to be present and listen to all the other actors perform. They were saying these really heavy things and giving striking performances that I didn’t know when I started getting emotional. 

    You’ll know this scene as soon as it comes up in the movie, but omo, it was the toughest scene for me to shoot throughout our production. 

    Making music is one thing, but I’m curious about what you learn about yourself when you attempt to become someone else as an actor

    So one of the major personality traits I realised I shared with my character was that we’re both carefree. Outside of that, acting in Gangs of Lagos allowed me to do things I wouldn’t do as Chike and understand how life would be different if they were my choices. 

    Source: Greoh Studios

    I got to see different parts of myself as a person. Could my life have gone differently, or could I have ended up as the guy I’m playing if my choices were different? But the most exciting thing about acting is I can do the wildest things and not get judged for it because it’s not real life. It’s not every job that gives you the freedom to be someone completely different every time. 

    RECOMMENDED: Everything You Need to Know About Jade Osiberu’s “Gangs of Lagos”

    Talking about music, what was going through your mind when you made your 2022 album, The Brother’s Keeper, especially after the success of 2020’s Boo of the Booless

    I was a completely different artiste when I made Boo of the Booless. I know a couple of people knew me before the album, but it’s not like I had an existing fanbase or anything like that. But then the album came out, and things changed. Making a new album, I knew millions of people would be listening, and it could’ve either made me bold or scared. But all I knew was I couldn’t stop. I needed to make music. 

    I didn’t consciously try for The Brother’s Keeper to be different. It was just a more confident album because I became a more confident artiste making it. People knew my music now. It wasn’t just friends and family telling me, “You’re a good singer. One day, you go make am.” 

    Nigerians love music that’ll make us dance even when it’s sad — look at Burna Boy’s Last Last and Omah Lay’s Soso. But you tend to make stripped-down emotional songs about hurt, love and fame. Why do you gravitate towards songs like that? 

    I read somewhere that it’s important to write what’s true to you, and that’s what I try to do as an artiste. I make sure I write down experiences and situations peculiar to me. I call my music “afro-stories” because my songs are my stories. For example, Please is about the fear that not all good things last. I could have a good run right now as a performer, but who knows how long it’ll last? So Please is just me praying, “Make my own no spoil”. 

    If my song is not about how I’m feeling now, it’s about what I felt before or how I’d react to a situation I’ve heard of. I don’t doubt that the music I’m making will find an audience. I’d have quit by now if I had doubts. My ultimate goal is to make music that’s realistic to me. 

    Help me understand why this album is called The Brother’s Keeper. Who is this brother? What is he keeping? And where can I find it? Three questions, but you get my gist. 

    Source: Chike

    People think it’s the album’s theme, but it’s not. The title was more of a representation of who I’d become as a person, not necessarily about the songs on the album. I’m my brother’s keeper, so the album is a: “The Brother’s Keeper presents you with these songs”, not “These songs are about being your brother’s keeper”. 

    The remix of Spell with Oxlade is out right now. What inspires your collaborations? 

    Collaborations are always about the music for me. What can I do to make this song better? If I can hear someone on a song in my head, I’ll reach out and try to get them to jump on it. Going with an artiste who elevates my song is the first and last step in deciding on a collaboration for me. 

    Interestingly, I didn’t go after Oxlade for the remix of Spell. Oxlade is my guy, and we share the same producer. He heard the song at our producer’s place and decided to do something on it. He called me after and told me about it. My team and I loved his input. This was before the album even dropped. But we held on to the remix because I wanted to release it later. I have a thing for extending the lifespan of my work. LOL. 

    What’s next for our brother’s keeper? 

    I’m still determining, but we might make a video for Enough and put that out soon. I’ll put out new music if we don’t do that. 

    Another album? 

    Abeg o. I said I’ll put out new music. I didn’t say “album”. New music could be a single. Last last, everyone will get new music. 

    ALSO READ: Here’s How to Plan the Perfect “Gangs of Lagos” Watch Party

  • The Most Iconic Mother-Daughter Duos To Grace Our Screens

    The Most Iconic Mother-Daughter Duos To Grace Our Screens

    Every Batman needs a Robin, every alte babe needs a pair of baggy jeans, and every good on-screen pairing needs great chemistry. Especially if we’re to believe one of them raised the other like a Nigerian mother would her daughter. 

    And like jollof rice is better than fried rice, we think these Nollywood mother-daughter pairings are more iconic than others.

    Sola Sobowale and Adesua Etomi in King of Boys 1 and Wedding Party 1 & 2

    Adesua and Sola share such great chemistry on screen, it’s no surprise they’ve played mother and daughter three times. From Wedding Party 1 and 2, where Sola played the doting mother who would move hell and highwater to ensure her daughter’s life went smoothly…

    Photo credit: nairaland.com

    …to becoming partners in crime in King of Boys 1. Inject it into our veins.

    Photo credit: withinnigeria.com

    Hopefully, they’ll share the screen again soon.

    Shaffy Bello and Nengi Adoki in The Men’s Club

    Photo credit: RedTV via YouTube

    These two look good AF together. You know those families where everyone looks like they’ve just walked out of a magazine? Yeah, that’s what these two look like on the show. You can almost believe they have the same blood flowing through their veins from the way they change it for idiots to their taste in taken/married men. We’re here for all of it.

    Ngozi Nwosu and Sharon Ooja in Skinny Girl in Transit

    Photo credit: madailygist.ng

    Ngozi Nwosu’s character has two daughters, but there’s just something about her relationship with Sharon’s character. They’re always at each other’s throats, yet it’s glaringly obvious that Sharon is the last born of the house, and if you let her, she’ll crawl back into her mother’s womb. It’s the sweetest thing ever.

    Stella Damasus and Bimbo Ademoye in Gone

    Photo credit: Netflix

    Honestly, their relationship was bittersweet. Something about the sadness and anger in their characters’ eyes, when they saw the man who’d abandoned them for years. You can tell their shared experiences made them really close, and that’s heartwarming to see.

    Ufuoma McDermott and Aramide Okenegbero in My Mum and I 

    Photo credit: R2TV via youtube

    If “us against the world” had a physical representation, it’d be these two. They had to restructure their relationship after Ufuoma left Aramide’s father. And even though she wouldn’t stop scheming for her parents to return to each other, we can clearly see they have each other’s backs.

    Kate Henshaw and Genoveva Umeh in Blood Sisters 

    Photo credit: thefilmconversation.com

    Toxic parent-child relationships matter too. Something about Kate and Genoveva’s characters playing mother and daughter but still being each other’s biggest opps gave us major endorphins. 

    Abiola Segun-Williams and Tomi Odunsi in Tinsel

    Photo credit: kamdora.com

    After living with her grandmother all her life, Tomi’s character returned to her mother’s house, and we got to watch their relationship grow. From practical strangers to becoming thick as thieves, these two brought joyful chaos to our screens.

  • Stella Damasus Stepped Away From Being a Household Name In Search of Something Bigger

    Stella Damasus Stepped Away From Being a Household Name In Search of Something Bigger

    “It was a reality check, mehn,” Stella Damasus tells me. “I was a household name in Nigeria, and I was doing good. But then I moved to a different country [America] where people didn’t even know who I was.”

    From the outside looking in, Stella is one of those few actors who has achieved stardom that never really fades. She’s transitioned from the prominent face on posters for Nollywood classics — Missing Angel, Real Love and Games Women Play — in the early 2000s to being the face of some of the most viral memes on the internet today. 

    As someone whose childhood was marked by several Stella Damasus movie moments, it was hard not to get starstruck as we talked about what it was like navigating Old Nollywood, her favourite Stella Damasus memes and the struggles that come with starting all over again after leaving a successful career in Nigeria behind.

    It’s been a minute since we saw you onscreen. What have you been up to lately? 

    Plenty of work. On the entertainment side, I’ve shot four movies in America I hope will come out this year (2023). I’m shooting another one soon that’ll hopefully bring me back to Nigeria. And then, I have businesses because life in America is different. 

    Tell me about it

    I can’t depend on one source of income. I have a media company; an online store, Geli; I coach marketing and communications; and I teach actors in An Actor’s Playhouse. What else do I do again? Omo, dem plenty. 

    The hustle is real. I’m curious how you adjusted to living in a new country, where you couldn’t rely on being “Stella Damasus, the actress” 

    I had to sit up and realise acting opportunities, specifically the ones I like, don’t come along all the time. But you know what comes almost every day? Bills. America isn’t a place where I can say, “Oh, I have a gateman or a driver.” I have to do everything myself. 

    As an immigrant, I had to do double work to learn the culture and look for opportunities because no one cared who I was back home in Nigeria. 

    Did you ever consider moving back to Nigeria? 

    I still considered moving back yesterday. I’ve thought about it on and off for seven years because no matter how much time I spend, life here is never easy. Sometimes, I wonder why I left my life in Nigeria behind, but then, I remember I’m doing this for my children. I want to come back after I’ve accomplished much more with my life. I want my children to look at me and be inspired by the sacrifices I made. 

    Why did you feel the need to make that sacrifice and walk away from everything?  

    I wanted my girls to grow up in a more enabling environment where they’d be free to explore different skills and career paths. Growing up in Nigeria, I saw how women were marginalised and their voices stifled; I didn’t want that for my girls. Don’t get me wrong, there’s still disparity in equality for women worldwide, but there’s a certain level of freedom women have here, and that’s what I wanted for my girls. 

    What did you want for yourself? 

    I wanted to learn more about what it took to be an international actor. I’d been a big fish in a small pond, and I was ready to challenge myself by getting into an industry in a completely different environment.

    I remember actresses like Sandra Achums, Georgina Onuoha and Victoria Iyanma moved abroad and stopped acting. Yet, you’ve somehow managed not to. How do you find these projects? 

    Stella Damasus in Victoria, 2023

    I don’t blame the actors who move abroad and stop acting. E remain small, me sef I for don start nursing or IT. 

    LOL. I’m scrimming

    As a Nigerian, your number one goal when you get here is: “How am I going to survive?” Now imagine trying to feed and get shelter, and then someone tells you to go for acting classes or audition with small small children because your Nigerian resumé doesn’t count? 

    Getting acting jobs was hard for me. In Nigeria, they told me to tone down my oyinbo. But in oyinbo land, they told me I didn’t sound American or African enough, so they didn’t know what to do with me. Then there was my skin not being “African enough”, me needing to lose weight to become a size six and finding a manager who believed in me as an actor.

    Hollywood speaks a lot about diversity and inclusion, but the truth is, they haven’t extended this diversity to African actors. They would rather cast non-Africans to play an African role and make them put on these outrageous accents.

    As someone used to telling Nigerian stories, how do you approach or connect with characters you get as an actor in America? 

    When I read a script, I like to ask questions. I ask myself and then the producer: “Does the story make sense? Does my character make sense in the story, or can they do without me?” I’ve never been the person to go: “Oh, the money is too small,” because I’ll do it as long as the script speaks to me.

    I’ve grown to understand that just because I don’t relate to a character or story as a Nigerian doesn’t mean they’re not important. Americans have a different culture. I’ve received scripts where my peculiarities as a Nigerian didn’t allow me to understand the story from the jump. I’m like, “Okay, this and this happened, but what does it mean?” I have to do the work to understand where they’re coming from. 

    Tell us about a recent character that challenged you in that way? 

    Red. She’s a character from a short film I did called AKWUNA, and she’s a sex worker. It’s a very gritty story, so I had to do things I haven’t done in my over 28 years of acting. I know when people finally see it, they’ll be shocked. It’s not the girl-next-door character they’re used to seeing me play.

    Let’s go back in time a bit: I’ve heard many stories about Old Nollywood, back in the 1990s and early 2000s in Surulere and Festac. What are some of your fondest memories from this era? 

    Stella Damasus and Kanayo O. Kanayo in The Market Seller, 2003

    Oh, my goodness! Those two places. No matter where we lived at the time, we had to show up in Surulere for auditions, and then Festac was where the movies were shot. There was this small hotel, Winis, where we gathered every morning to go and look for auditions like it was our office. Life wasn’t that difficult back then because we were all friends. It wasn’t just about who got what role. 

    There was also this office at the National Theatre where they’d paste notices for auditions. See, even if it was three different places we had to go for auditions, we’d enter buses and go. It was do or die for us. If we wanted a role, we had to line up for hours to audition, and sometimes, it didn’t get to our turn before they chose someone.

    It’s different from today; I can stroll in and get a role based on my social media following or how much I can invest in the film. 

    Stella Damasus and Genevieve Nnaji in Games Women Play, 2005

    We wanted to act so badly. There was no plan A or B; acting was our only plan. I look back now, and I miss those days. 

    Being an actor is a big deal now so it’s easy to see why anyone would want that life. But Nollywood wasn’t always like this, which makes me wonder how you could want something so bad when you couldn’t even tell what success would look like when you got it

    We didn’t have a clear cut vision of what the future would look like. It was just passion. The money we were paid when we started was nothing, but we didn’t mind. I was lucky enough to have married early and had a man who supported my decision to become an actor, but not everyone had support at home. Acting was frowned upon. My family fought me and didn’t talk to me for three years. I said, “I’ll become something, and you guys will love me back.” LOL. 

    RECOMMENDED: Everything You Should Know About Becoming an Actor in Nigeria

    Wow

    We didn’t have an idea of stardom or that the money will one day be good. Acting was a chance for us to have the freedom to be anyone we wanted and still get paid something for that. What could be better than that? It was a part of our existence. Omo, I go still dey inside bus and I go see my face on top of posters under Ojuelegba bridge. No one could tell me anything. That was our high. Walking around Tejuosho market and having people recognise us and say, “See that girl from that film,” because they didn’t even know our names. That was our idea of stardom. 

    Stella Damasus, Richard Mofe Damijo and Kate Henshaw in The Bridesmaid, 2005

    I remember my father calling me to say they’d asked him to come into the manager’s office at the bank because they saw his last name, and he said he was my dad. That was the beauty of it for us actors back then. 

    I miss the era of posters, videotapes and DVDs. Going digital has made superstardom less tangible in my opinion. Now you can just swipe, scroll and move on. 

    Stella Damasus, Genevieve Nnaji and Omotola Jalade-Ekeinde in Games Women Play, 2005

    My kids call me old school because I like to hold and feel things live. I still have my old CDs, and sometimes, I just go into my bedroom and watch my films. Nothing beats inserting that CD and being drawn into a different world. 

    As an actor back then, you knew you’d made it when your face is bigger than everyone else’s on a poster, and your name is written in bold. It’s not like now where we have different posters for each character. I could take a poster and have it up in my room. It felt real to me. We’ve gained a lot from technology, but I miss that life too. 

    You enjoy watching your old work? 

    I used to hate looking at myself doing anything. But over the past few years, I’ve realised I appreciate myself more because there’s proof of growth. I watch some old movies and be like: “Damn, how did I become a household name?” or “Why was I crying and shouting like say somebody bin dey press my neck?” But all this was without formal training. Many of us came into the industry with just raw talent. 

    Talking about your old work, please, tell me you’ve seen the memes people have made from clips of your scenes? 

    Perish that idea! I’ve seen a lot. 

    Stella Damasus’ iconic “Perish that idea” meme.

    I’m dying. Which one’s your fave? 

    It has to be that one—Wait, I also like that clip of me in the brown dress, rolling on the floor screaming: “Oh my god. I’m dead,” and the one from Games Women Play where I’m trying to open the floor. 

    I love seeing these memes because they always make me laugh. But what I appreciate the most is someone thinking of an expression or reaction, connecting it with a scene I’ve done and then taking time to cut that scene out for memes. Guy, that’s a lot of work. If someone had told me when we were shooting that those scenes would be something people call a “meme”, I wouldn’t have believed them. 

    Let me dive into your memory of these films for a minute. I remember watching Engagement Night with Charles Okafor, The Bridesmaid with RMD and then that sad film with Jim Iyke and Clarion Chukwura—

    It was called Cry Like a River

    Yeah, that name is apt. You were a millennial romantic comedy and drama icon, and I’d like to know what you remember about making those films. 

    Those movies made my career what it was. Producers would look at me and say, “This babe is good for romance and crying.” 

    It was weird taking on romantic roles initially because most of the films selling were about jazz, like Circle of Doom or Living in Bondage. So it’s not like we had role models for romcoms. Imagine meeting someone for the first time, and you have to start hugging them and forming love. 

    I contemplated stepping away from romantic roles, but then, I started seeing how much impact these films made, and I reconsidered. People loved these films. Everybody wanted to marry me! I’d meet random people telling me how the way I loved Ramsey [Nouah] or RMD changed their marriage and made them believe in romance. These films gave people joy. They wanted the type of love we showed in our films. Their responses made me want to do more. 

    RELATED: Who Else Thought These Nollywood Couples Were Actually Together?

    See, I was one of those people who were confident you were married to RMD. I miss iconic pairings in Nollywood. 

    Stella Damasus and Richard Mofe Damijo in Romantic Attraction, 2004

    The people we regarded as movie stars back then weren’t up to a thousand like today’s Nollywood. Pairing me and RMD, Genevieve and Ramsey or Omotola and Emeka Ike was easy. But now, an actress gets paired with 15 different guys in one month, so it’s hard to find a pairing that works. 

    We used to work on our chemistry. On the late Amaka Igwe or Charles Novia’s set, you couldn’t come and do nonsense. We’d be on set from 8 a.m. to 3 a.m. until we got it right. These new guys don’t always have time to build chemistry, and it shows. 

    The way our movies are written these days also causes this disconnection. I always get in trouble for saying this, but evolution can be dangerous. Nollywood has sacrificed too much of our stories, culture and relatability because we want to go international. We’ve decided to become someone else, and our audience notices these things. That’s why people keep looking back at old Nollywood today. 

    But who am I to talk? Shebi I need to produce my own first and bring it. LOL. 

    Still on those romance films from back then, what are your top three? Let’s compare lists. 

    Stella Damasus and Desmond Elliot in Missing Angel, 2004

    I’d do Engagement Night for sure. Missing Angel too. What’s the name of that film I did with RMD and Sharon Ezeamaka where my character died? 

    Yes, the one where he fell in love with Chioma Chukwuka? 

    Yes, Romantic Attraction

    The way RMD and I played husband and wife in that film? Mehn, I can confidently say it was #CoupleGoals. 

    Facts. Movie titles were so unhinged back then. 

    Stella Damasus and Ramsey Noah in Real Love, 2003

    It always had love: Could This Be Love?, Real Love, Pure Love, etc. 

    LOL. 

    Stella, people want to know who’s the best onscreen lover/husband/boyfriend out of Ramsey Nouah, Desmond Elliot, Jim Iyke and RMD? 

    Ah! This is a dangerous question. But everyone knows the answer. The name has only three letters. 

    Yessss. I knew it. 

    Stella Damasus and Richard Mofe Damijo in The Intruder, 2003

    Let me tell you why. RMD is friends with my older sister from their secondary school days, and he was the first person to sit me down to talk about what I should expect getting into Nollywood. 

    RMD also taught me to always rehearse with my partners. Even if we couldn’t rehearse before the day we shot, you’d find both of us in a corner while the crew was setting up, just going over the script and how we wanted to act and react to different things. We always agreed on a style for each couple. That’s why even though the way we did Engagement Night was different from Romantic Attraction, people still felt that chemistry between us. 

    I learnt scene breakdown from RMD, and I used it with other actors. I still teach it to my students today. 

    That explains a lot. Before you go, I need you to help me find love. As someone who’s played multiple romantic characters, what’s the best way to unsingle myself, abeg? 

    I don’t believe in “finding love”. You’ll meet love. Finding love is when people look for someone to complete them or make them happy, but the right person will only meet you at a point where you’re your own person. No one can complete you; they’ll just complement you. Once you get to a place where you’re considerate, loyal, respectful and ready to communicate, you’ll meet love. It shouldn’t be a hunt.

    But this is based on my experience o. Before someone will come and say this is what Stella asked them to do. 

    LOL. It’s time for me to go out there and meet love.

    That’s the energy you need. Good luck. 

    ALSO READ: Nollywood Female Characters Are Messy, AKA Revolutionary

  • Everything You Need to Know About Jade Osiberu’s “Gangs of Lagos”

    Everything You Need to Know About Jade Osiberu’s “Gangs of Lagos”

    Amazon Prime recently announced an April 2023 release date for Gangs of Lagos, the latest collaboration between Jade Osiberu and Tobi Bakre. After Brotherhood, it’s safe to crown these two as Nollywood’s queen and king of action. And with higher stakes and an all-star cast, Gangs of Lagos is one film I’m totally psyched to see.

    Source: instagram.com/jadeosiberu

    But what exactly do you need to know about the film Jade has been working on for two years? 

    Source: instagram.com/primevideonaija

    Let’s fill you in.

    What’s the film about? 

    Source: instagram.com/jadeosiberu

    Gangs of Lagos follows three friends — Obalola (Tobi Bakre), Gift (Adesua Etomi) and Panama (Chike) — as they navigate life and violence in Lagos’ notorious area of Isale Eko. The entire plot is still being kept under wraps, but I know there’ll be a lot of fighting, insane action stunts and a cast that also includes Chioma Akpotha, Bimbo Ademoye, Zlatan Ibile, Iyabo Ojo and Tayo Faniran. 

    This isn’t the first time Jade has worked with most of the cast

    Gangs of Lagos is basically a reunion project. The film marks the third project Jade has worked on with both Adesua Etomi (Gidi Up, Sugar Rush) and Tobi Bakre (Sugar Rush, Brotherhood). It’s also Bimbo Ademoye’s second time working with Jade after breaking out with Sugar Rush in 2019. 

    Gangs of Lagos was shot way before Brotherhood 

    Source: instagram.com/jadeosiberu

    Brotherhood was the highest grossing film of 2022 and a game changer for Nollywood, but what if I told you Jade had shot and wrapped up Gangs of Lagos even before they announced the cast of Brotherhood? Gangs of Lagos actually started shooting in June 2021 and ended in August of that year. Meanwhile, the cast of Brotherhood was announced in April 2022. I don’t know why it took this long, but I’m a patient dog, and Gangs of Lagos looks like a fat bone. Just saying. 

    Zlatan and Chike’s first film, and Pasuma’s first non-Yoruba film 

    Source: instagram.com/jadeosiberu
    Source: instagram.com/officialchike

    Musicians taking a stab at acting is nothing new. With Gangs of Lagos, we’ll get to add Zlatan and Chike’s names to a long list that already includes Banky W, Tiwa Savage, Falz, Reminisce and Seyi Shay.

    Source: instagram.com/jadeosiberu

    Fuji musician, Pasuma Wonder, will also be playing a character called London. This’ll be his first non-Yoruba Nollywood film — but there’s a high chance Yoruba will pop up since the story is set in Isale Eko.

    The film also features The Ikorodu Bois

    Source: instagram.com/jadeosiberu

    The Ikorodu Bois have entertained us over the past six years with their hilarious and innovative remakes of trending trailers and movies, from Black Panther: Wakanda Forever to Netflix’s Extraction. Reshares and retweets are nice, but it’s incredible to finally see Maleek (one of the group members) work on an actual set. 

    RECOMMENDED: How to Make a Badass Nollywood Action Film, According to “Brotherhood” Scriptwriter, Abdul Tijani-Ahmed

    There’s an epic street fight scene in Isale Eko featuring Pasuma 

    Source: instagram.com/jadeosiberu

    Almost every picture from Gangs of Lagos has someone looking all bloodied and stressed from fighting. 

    Source: instagram.com/jadeosiberu

    But if there’s one action sequence I’m dying to watch, it’s the one that features Pasuma and a bunch of guys fighting on the streets of Isale Eko. If for nothing, I want to watch the part where this guy lifts Pasuma like a bag of water. 

    Source: instagram.com/jadeosiberu

    Is Zlatan in his villain era? 

    Source: instagram.com/jadeosiberu

    We all know Zlatan can zanku and drop bangers, but can he beat Tobi Bakre? 

    Source: instagram.com/jadeosiberu

    That’s what we’ll find out when Gangs of Lagos drops, with the singer’s character set to throw hands with Tobi Bakre. Is he the main villain of the story? We don’t know yet, but Mr Ibile is sha an opp. 

    Gangs of Lagos and The Woman King have something in common

    Source: instagram.com/directortough

    Viola Davis’ The Woman King was one of the best films of 2022 (even though an award group of primarily white voters failed to give it the flowers it deserved). But what does it have in common with the upcoming Gangs of Lagos? The same stunt coordinator (Director Tough) who taught Jimmy Odukoya how to fight Viola Davis in The Woman King also taught Tobi Bakare, Adesua Etomi and the rest of the Gangs of Lagos cast how to fight one another

    The film is co-produced by #ZikokoMyBro alumni 

    Am I really Nigerian if I don’t look for the smallest connection I have to this film and famz with it? Gangs of Lagos is co-produced by Depths and Optics Production, run by Adesegun Adetoro and Demi Banwo, the friends who made us cry and believe in true bromance in this episode of #ZikokoMyBro

    Gangs of Lagos is Jade Osiberu’s third film as a director 

    Source: instagram.com/jadeosiberu

    Yes, I know what you’re thinking: “But Jade is like one of the biggest names in Nollywood. This can’t be her third film.” Well, it is. While Jade has worked as a producer and sometimes writer on Ndani TV’s Gidi Up and Rumour Has It, Sugar Rush, Ayinla and Brotherhood, she’s only directed two films before Gangs of Lagos: the rom-com classic, Isoken, and 2022’s Trade

    Jade is proof that when you’re big, you’re big. You don’t have to direct one film every year to remain relevant. 

    ALSO READ: 12 Nollywood Films Gen Zs Will Call “Classics” When They Become Parents

  • QUIZ: Who Is Your Nollywood Mum?

    QUIZ: Who Is Your Nollywood Mum?

    Do you deserve a quiet, stress-free mum like Joke Silva or a funny, cool mum like Funke Akindele?

  • The Rock and Vin Diesel Have Nothing on These Old Nollywood Action Stars

    The Rock and Vin Diesel Have Nothing on These Old Nollywood Action Stars

    Yes, Vin Diesel is great at lying to us that cars can fly in the Fast and the Furious movie series, but has he ever had to challenge spirits in the evil forest like Gentle Jack?

    We all know The Rock kills it playing the same character lost in a bush over and over again in Jurassic World, Jungle Cruise and Journey 2: The Mysterious Island, but can he fight while speaking in an untraceable accent like Hanks Anuku? The answer is “No”. 

    Here are some of Old Nollywood’s finest action stars I believe would give Vin and Dwayne a run for their money. 

    Gentle Jack 

    Before all the men in Lagos started to look like bouncers because of iFitness, Gentle Jack was the biggest guy I’d ever seen. This man looked like a pro WWE wrestler with arms the size of an average person’s head. Don’t believe me? See it for yourself:  

    Gentle Jack was one of Nollywood’s biggest action stars based on movies like Vuga and Rescue Mission that showed his ability to switch from village hero to modern gang leader with ease. 

    Sam Dede

    We can’t talk about Nollywood without mentioning the anti-robbery film, Isakaba. It’s also impossible to talk about Isakaba without stanning the film’s leading man, Sam Dede. This man invented the word, “Zaddy” — please, argue with yourself. 

    Over two decades later, Sam Dede is still fighting criminals and kicking ass in Jadesola Osiberu’s Brotherhood. A forever fave. 

    Saint Obi 

    If Old Nollywood ever made a Bond movie, Saint Obi would’ve been James. Saint Obi was one of those actors who could beat your ass in one minute wearing this fit: 

    Then, show up the next minute dressed like one of those “aspire to perspire” motivational speakers: 

    This is the versatility I stan. When last did you see Vin Diesel in a suit? 

    RECOMMENDED: I Watched The Nollywood Movie, “State of Emergency” So You Don’t Have To

    Hanks Anuku 

    You know a character is up to no good when he’s played by Hanks Anuku. Fear the character some more when you hear he just got back from the “states” but has an untraceable Ameringlish accent. 

    Even though he was terrifying AF, something about his acting (and accent) made even the most serious scenes feel comedic. He was like, “I’ll blow your brains out, but at least, you’ll die laughing.”  

    JT Tom West 

    JT Tom West was the ultimate villain in the Nollywood hostage film, State of Emergency. Not only did JT’s looks and acting embody his characters, his name literally sounds like it belongs to a random CIA agent on 24 or Quantico

    JT was a no-nonsense action star ready to waste anyone who wasted his time. No forgiveness or mercy unlike the guys in Fast and Furious

    Chidi Mokeme 

    Nothing is more satisfying than when one of your faves finally gets the flowers they deserve by entering the Gen Z cool book. Chidi Mokeme recently had that moment after playing Scar on Netflix’s Shanty Town

    But before he played the gang leader and human organ trafficker who also happens to be a polyglot, Chidi Mokeme was a renowned action star in Old Nollywood thanks to films like Bad Boys with Saint Obi and His Majesty with Kanayo O. Kanayo. Action star or not, Chidi was also a big time Nollywood lover boy: 

    McMaurice Ndubueze 

    Is it really a campus cult movie if McMaurice Ndubueze isn’t roaming up and down, terrorising everybody in sight? 

    While all the other action stars on this list intimidated people by throwing hands or shooting guns, McMaurice’s power is in his ability to threaten his victims until they piss themselves. His facial reactions to his gang members’ or victim’s stupidity also live rent free in my head. 

    Remember this one? 

    Let’s not forget this one too

    ALSO READ: How to Make a Badass Nollywood Action Film, According to “Brotherhood” Scriptwriter, Abdul Tijani-Ahmed

  • Movie Villain Vs. Actual Villain: Nollywood Edition

    Movie Villain Vs. Actual Villain: Nollywood Edition

    Have you ever watched a movie, seen the supposed villain and thought to yourself, “Damn, I sort of agree with this person”? Yes, I’ve been there too. 

    Sure, some of these “villains” do crazy shit like rituals here and there, but what happened to looking at things from everyone’s point of view? As someone who’s watched an unhealthy amount of them since birth, I decided to show you the real villain in some of your fave Nollywood films. 

    Aníkúlápó

    Yes, I said it. While Saro (Kunle Remi) might be the living embodiment of a Yoruba demon, he lived the Abuja sweet boy life as a sugar baby and fashion designer before Queen Arolake (Bimbo Ademoye) came and blew everything up. Remember Arolake was the one who suggested they run away together. The moral of the story: avoid married women and know peace. 

    The Wedding Party 

    Getting robbed and having your ex show up at your wedding is one thing, but running out of amala on what’s supposed to be the happiest day of your life? Haba. All the drama in Kemi Adetiba’s The Wedding Party could’ve been avoided if Dozie (Banky W) and Dunni (Adesua Etomi)’s parents didn’t plan an elaborate party to outdo one another. Nigerians need to look into smaller weddings by the beach or something. 

    Egg of Life 

    The fact that an entire village thought it was cool to send seven teenage girls into the evil forest in search of one boiled egg to save their prince is still wild to me. Seven lives for one? It’s giving misogyny. It’s giving the silencing of female voices. All of you in that village will crumble. 

    Living in Bondage: Breaking Free

    I’m sorry, but you can’t join a cult where they’re wearing red robes and sacrificing people and then be shocked when they ask you to bring the head of someone you love. What did Nnamdi Okeke (Swanky JKA) from Living in Bondage: Breaking Free think the cult would ask for? Beyoncé’s Renaissance visuals? Be fucking for real, sir. We can’t blame the cult leader (Ramsey Nouah) when Nnamdi used his hand to register like it was JAMB. 

    Glamour Girls (The Remake) 

    Someone needs to beg Charles Okpaleke to free Old Nollywood. The remakes of Nneka the Pretty Serpent and Aki and Paw Paw stressed me, but Glamour Girl is the straw that has broken my 30+ back. Charles, enough is enough. 

    RECOMMENDED: Nollywood Keeps Doing Remakes, So We Ranked Them From Best to Worst

    Isoken

    Osaze (Joseph Benjamin) might’ve been so controlling that he pushed Isoken (Dakore Akande) into the arms of a coloniser. But let’s face it, Mummy Isoken (Tina Mba) was the real villain of this story. Is it a crime to be a single woman (and a successful one at that) in Lagos? You’d think Isoken needed a man to enter heaven with how her mother was on her neck to get married. Sorry ma, but like The Pussycat Dolls said: 

    Blood Sister

    Did Esther (Genevieve Nnaji) kill her sister, Gloria (Omotola Jalade Ekeinde), to marry her husband (Tony Umez)? Yes. But the last time I checked, she didn’t force the man. In other Nollywood films, the female character has to rely on juju to trap a man’s destiny. But Kenneth, in true Tony Umez fashion, willingly sashays into his sister-in-law’s panties. A shameless man, for real. 

    Rattlesnake: The Ahanna Story 

    Ahanna (Stan Nze) starts a robbery gang, steals from a rich ass-man then abandons his gang to start a new life in a different city. And I’m supposed to see Ali Mahmood (Nobert Young) as the villain? No, this doesn’t sit right with my inner spirit. Ahanna was the bad guy in this film. His ex (Osas Ighodaro) should’ve shot him instead of his wife. 

    Man of God 

    Man of God‘s Samuel Obalolu is a scammer who starts a church to steal people’s money and cheat on his wife in a way that pleases God. But let’s not forget his father was also a pastor who verbally and physically abused him as a child. The fact that Samuel’s return to his abuser is framed as a prodigal son going back home still keeps me up at night. Ewww. 

    Chief Daddy 2

    Do I even have to elaborate? EbonyLife has apologised for this film, so they know they were the problem, not Laila (Rahama Sadau). 

    Games Women Play 

    I grew up thinking Candice (Genevieve Nnaji) was the villain of this film for betting that her friend (Omotola Jalade Ekeinde) couldn’t seduce her man (Desmond Elliot). Still, just like in real life, Desmond Elliot is the villain here. Only a man who wants to be snatched can be snatched, and that’s facts. If Desmond Elliot’s Temisan loved Candice, no amount of seduction would’ve worked on him. Men will always disgrace you, sha. 

    ALSO READ: How to Avoid Being Used For Rituals, According to Nollywood

  • A Man Like Fadeyi Oloro, As Told By a Friend

    A Man Like Fadeyi Oloro, As Told By a Friend

    Nollywood icon and veteran actor Ojo Arowosafe, AKA Fadeyi Oloro, famous for Yoruba classics like Alagbara Ilu and Ija Abija has passed away at the age of 66 on March 7, 2023.  

    Arowosafe was a big star in the 1980s, andI recently had a conversation with his dear friend and fellow actor, Adeshola Makinde AKA Shomak. Here’s all you need to know about the actor who created one of the most iconic villains in Nollywood history

    Life before he became famous

    Before he got in front of the camera, Arowosafe was in Ado Ekiti, learning to be a mechanic. He found his passion for acting when he was about 25 after he joined a drama group organised by another Yoruba movie icon, Jimoh Aliyu. The group travelled around Nigeria doing stage plays, and it was at one of these stage plays in Kaduna that Arowosafe met his friend, Shomak in 1982. 

    The two were in different drama groups but ended up bonding over their love of acting. 

    His big break as Fadeyi Oloro 

    Before we started calling Patience Ozorkwor “Mama G” or Chinedu Ikedieze and Osita Iheme, “Aki and PawPaw”, Arowosafe was one of the earliest actors to eat a role up so well everyone forgot his real name and started calling him Fadeyi Oloro. 

    Arowosafe’s big break was on the Yoruba TV show, Arelu, which aired in 1987. Arelu means catastrophe, and it was Super Story before Wale Adenuga even created Super Story. The show had such an influence on pop culture back then, that the late fuji icon Sikiru Ayinde Barrister sang about Fadeyi Oloro (Arowosafe’s character) in a song on his 1988 album, Barry @ 40

    The character of Fadeyi Oloro was the show’s villain who used jazz to deal with anyone who crossed him. Fadeyi was also famous for iconic one-liners we can still use today, like: Bó bá sí wú ọ́, má fiyè dénú [if you like, don’t calm down o] and Mo lọ mo bọ̀, n ò bọmọ jẹ́ [I went, and I’ve returned with my name and character unsullied]. E for Energy. 

    Shomak recalls feeling very proud to see his friend blow up and become a cultural icon on the screen. “He played Fadeyi Oloro so well that people thought he was scary in real life,” he said. “They were always surprised that he was just a funny guy.” 

    RECOMMENDED: How to Survive If You Find Yourself in an Old Nollywood Horror Film

    His impact 

    Arowosafe as Fadeyi Oloro inspired his other villain roles in Yoruba films like Jagun Ina and Inu Bibi

    What will his friend miss the most about him? 

    Less than 24 hours after his passing, Showmak tells Zikoko that while he regrets not seeing his friend this year (2023), he’ll miss Arowosafe’s kindness, his ability to always give the best advice and make everyone feel comfortable. 

    “He could be sitting with you for the first time and still think of a joke that’ll make you laugh,” he says. “Fadeyi Oloro always made everyone around him feel like they belonged.” 

    R.I.P to an icon who changed the game, leaving behind a legacy that remains unmatched even after almost 40 years in the industry. 

    ALSO READ: Bimbo Ademoye Is NOT Underrated, She’s Nollywood’s New IT Girl

  • 9 Iconic Tiannah Styling Looks and Where You Can Wear Them To

    9 Iconic Tiannah Styling Looks and Where You Can Wear Them To

    If there’s one hill I’m willing to climb and die on, it’s that Toyin Lawani AKA Tiannah Styling is a fashion icon. 

    Before anyone comes for me about how Toyin’s clothes aren’t practical or realistic, here are some real life places and scenarios that are perfect for them. Go forth and slay. 

    This chicken dress

    Wear it to visit that relative who may or may not be an agent of darkness trying to wipe out your entire family. You don’t need to worry about them poisoning you if you pull up with your own chicken wings.  

    This multi-coloured plastic spoon dress

    You’re the no-nonsense caterer at an owambe and you want everyone to show you respect before you serve them jollof rice without meat. This is the dress to wear.

    This firewood pot dress and helmet 

    When they finally enlist youths to the military and you ready to serve your country and serve looks at the same time, but you also need a pot to boil agbado for you and the other 50 million soldiers. 

    This shukushaker aya shoemaker dress

    This dress screams “violence”. You should wear this to any event you know your haters are going to be at. By the time you start fighting, you can remove one or two shoes and throw it at their head Cardi B and Nicki Minaj style

    RECOMMENDED: 13 Nigerian Celebrity Halloween Costumes, Ranked from “Meh” to “Creepy AF”

    This nun dress with the thigh-high slits

    For when you have to help your reverend father serve holy communion during 6 p.m. mass but still get ready for your dance routine at Silver Fox by 8 p.m.

    This coat of many colours 

    This pretty semi-casual dress is what you wear on a date with any man named Joseph. Not only will you grab his attention with all the primary and secondary colours on this dress, he’ll also see you’re a virtuous, bible-reading woman since you showed up in the coat his namesake lost. 

    This Simba ball gown 

    This number works for when you hear EbonyLife is making a Nigerian version of The Lion King and you want to audition for Nala. Or wear it to the zoo so the lions there will know you’re the real jagaban of the jungle. 

    This many-faced God dress

    This works when you’re owing plenty people money, but you still want to go out for Friday rocks. With all these masks, you can turn up and have a good time without fear that your onigbese lifestyle will come and bite you in the bumbum. 

    This Xmas special jumpsuit

    This “xmas” jumpsuit is what you should wear when you can’t afford to buy your man something for Christmas, so you decide to confuse him with intense fornication for the sixth year in a row. 

    ALSO READ: Nollywood Needs to Answer for These Criminal Fashion Moments