Trends
Mod’Orisa short movie review
- Recommended for “Yoruba films” enthusiasts only.
As far as substance goes, ‘Mod’Orisa’ is just another run of the mill Yoruba traditional film. “Traditional” meaning; that genre (variety) of Yoruba films characterized by ancestral rustic settings, undiluted Yoruba and significant amounts of incantations. The acting is great, production is crispy, costumes look tasty, but the CGI is extensively old school. All together, if you are “really” into these genre and you can’t wait for it to get to DVD, paying a premium for this wouldn’t be a waste. Have fun.
For everybody else however, including those who understand Yoruba fluently; if you aren’t already a convert of this genre of Yoruba movies, we strongly suggest you walk past ‘Mod’Orisa’. There’s just nothing here compelling or emotive enough to bring you into the fold. ‘Mod’Orisa’ is not going to be your turning point. The story it tells is too weak, too basic and too fractured to warrant making a sacrificial detour from your norm. We say again; Keep walking.
Synopsis: Mo’dorisa tells the epic story of Dayese village, which never remained the same after a whirlwind swept away all male residents (both young and old), leaving the women with no choice but to take the bull by the horn.
Starring: Ayo Adesanya, Ayo Mogaji, Bimbo Oshin, Faithia Balogun, Fausat Balogun, Foluke Daramola, Kemi Afolabi, Peju Ogunmola, Ronke Ojo, Shola Kososko.
-
Football1 week agoArsenal confirm departure of 15 players ahead of summer exit
-
Crime7 days agoLASU student dies after armed robbery attack
-
Featured7 days agoOsun APC counters Adeleke over security drone dispute, urges public to ignore allegations against Oyetola
-
Politics7 days agoEmeka Ike reacts to alleged INEC-linked data breach
-
Politics7 days agoFour PDP reps from Bauchi defect to APM, cite internal party crisis
-
News7 days agoCelebrating Governor Mutfwang’s visionary leadership three years on
-
Latest5 days agoAkpabio denies promising APC tickets to defeated Senators
-
Latest1 week agoJonathan’s silence fuels speculation over 2027 presidency ambition

