
Forget the story.
Forget the acting.
Forget the hype.
Go see Kpali the movie for the aerial shots that make Lagos look nothing
like the chaotic urban conurbation we all love to hate.
Ladi Johnson and his DoP get full
marks for producing a crisp, visually stunning film.
But movies are much more than
cinematography and visual clarity. Movies have to be visceral and relatable and
realistic in a way that approaches verisimilitude.
Kpali ticks all
those boxes as a movie revolving around a 20 something year old Amaka Kalayo
whose sedate London life is set on a roller coaster when her bosses inform her
that she has 30 days to close a big deal or lose not just her job but her Kpali; her visa, work permit and right
to live and work in the UK.
Thrust into this career maelstrom,
Amaka departs for Nigeria with her oyinbo male colleague in tow. They arrive
Lagos and for some curious reason head together to Amakas family home and thus
ensues the comedy of errors that is almost always at the heart of a true
rom-com.
Kpali is funny, quirky, relatable
and clear in the audience it addresses itself to.
It has Nkem Osuofia Owoh as well
as Seyi law for the laughs. When Amakas colleague introduces himself as Jake
Hunter, Nkem Owohs character asks “ Who is the hunted?
But it is not the ha-ha moments that
hold the most appeal, it is those moments where the actors throw a curveball,
where you, as the audience, has been led a certain way and then surprised by
something least expected.
A case in point is where Jidenna
looks deep in Amakas eyes on their first date and while you are cringing and
hoping he doesnt say I love you or I want to marry you he says something
completely asinine but which cracks every one up.
This is a movie for Naija
millennials, young career minded Nigerians living within or outside the country
and trying to find that elusive balance between work and living. They are educated,
well-travelled, savvy and eloquent in the lingo of the internet generation.
But no matter how world savvy they
are, they remain at the core, Nigerians who have to answer to their parents and
bring a man or woman to perpetuate the family line.
Kpali is exciting
to watch because it presents a movie that proceeds along multiple narrative
strands. This is important in holding audience attention. There is the work
angle with Amaka running against the clock to get the deal sealed but thrown
into the mix is the emotional angle as Amaka begins to catch feelings not just
for one but two men and then there is the IJGB angle, with Amaka as a potential
I Just Got Back whose encounter with Nigeria begins to give her a fresh
perspective to things.
By proceeding along these disparate
trajectories, Kpali addresses itself
to multiple audiences many of whom will find at least one strand appealing
enough to go see the movie.
Ms. Okojie is a delight as leading
lady. Her choice of outfits are spot on especially for a corporate highflier
something Nollywood hardly ever gets right and her face is a study in emotional
turmoil from hearing the news to running into Jake Hunter at the airport to
taking a call from her parents, her pretty face is a mobile signboard of
emotions.
Her attempts to get past IK
Osakioduwas character is ennobling because it quickly helps situate her in a
different context where she is seen as not just a pretty face but one with
brains and business savvy.
The key message though is that when
the world seems to be crashing all around you, take out time and seek a change
of scene. It often provides fresh perspectives. Amaka is suddenly no longer all
about work. She is finally stopping to smell the roses and let the petals of
her heart unfurl to the kiss of the sun of love. Where does she find love? Who
does she choose between the two men who make her heart go boom? Head to the
cinema.
But Kpali is not a perfect film. There are contrived scenes especially
when she gets her phone snatched. You have to wonder why she had to wind her
window down or that market scene where Jake buys that hideous bag.
But as Nollywood movies go, this is
a feel good romp and a very relatable movie that will appeal to millennials who
are battling that transition from dependency to independence while evading that
pesky question “ Nne, when are you getting married?
Kpali hits
cinemas, nationwide, today, Friday, December 20, 2019
Toni Kan, award-winning writer and critic, writes from
Lagos.



























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