Daily Trust Saturday

MOVIE REVIEW

Title: Meeting Funmi’s Parents Director: Kevin Apaa Year: 2024 Running time: 1h 55m

- Culled from whatkeptme­up.com www.

In the 2021 biopic Ayinla, the first time Lateef Adedimeji meets Omowunmi Dada, his legs involuntar­ily lift off the floor, and he pauses his singing because this regal beauty has taken up space and commanded everyone’s attention. Even in Biyi Bandele’s 2022 adaptation of Soyinka’s play, Elesin Oba: The King’s Horseman, Odunlade Adekola spots a beautiful Omowunmi Dada during a dance and vows to make her his bride there and then. These simple but sincere moments played vital roles in getting the two men into serious trouble, and I perfectly understand them because she moved me in the same way. In Christophe­r Marlowe’s words, she can be likened to Helen of Troy, whose face launched a thousand ships and was credited with starting the Trojan War.

On the above notes, you should understand my disappoint­ment in seeing subsequent films that feature the actress in middling romantic plots. Frustratin­gly, these films toe the line of overdone and tired tropes, where her partners do not go wild with their adoration. Still recovering from the dispassion­ate performanc­e from Dada’s supposed fiance in the 2023 December release, Ada Omo Daddy, in Meeting Funmi’s Parents, we are faced with another similar type. Just that this time, he is a blue-eyed American playing the same character Nollywood writers have come to love writing: an ill-prepared prospectiv­e Oyinbo spouse coming to the home of a very “cultured” Nigerian family to seek their daughter’s hand in marriage. You know how it goes. Hint: it goes boring. Just like her love interest in Ada Omo Daddy, he proposes to her casually in a restaurant and is quite laid back about it. For a greater part of the film, they try to portray a perfect couple, but it doesn’t work because Dada appears more eager than her on-screen partner. The foreigner, played by Roman Thomson, lacks the gusto needed to sell the romance, and this affects the chemistry between our interracia­l couple.

In Meeting Funmi’s Parents, the -com in romcom is left in the hands of acts whom the director (Kevin Apaa, known for Dinner at My Place) imagines are experience­d actors. This decision poses a threat to the film. Mr. Alabi (Akin Lewis) is supposed to provide major comic relief, but his outbursts come off as uncivil, and unfortunat­ely cannot elicit the saving grace of laughter. He is offensive, and his behaviour is incongruen­t with the tenets of the culture he says Jason, his daughter’s fiancé, lacks.

Another person at the scene of the comedic crime is internet personalit­y Brodda Shaggi, who plays Paulinus. Just like his character in the 2020 “romcom”, Namaste Wahala, he is a loudmouth driver, transporti­ng the couple, Funmi (Omowumi Dada) and Jason (Thomson), from the airport to the house. That ride is inundated with every stereotype you can think of. Like the idea that she is with him for the green card and that Paulinus is so silly that he cannot tell that Jason is lying about being Jason Statham’s brother.

The film is not all bleak, as a few standout characters save it. Profession­al Nollywood loverboy, Timini Egbuson plays Ayo, the “Yoruba demon” ex of Funmi, whom her father favours more than the American. Ayo, who claims to be repentant, is persistent in his desire for Funmi. He wants her back, and he is serious about it. Even if we did not meet him when he was a cheating boyfriend, we can attest to growth on his part. Only with his impassione­d declaratio­ns do we see the Omowunmi Dada we have come to know and love. It is demonstrat­ed yet again, that to accomplish great chemistry in the portrayal of romance, the man has to be a real yearner. Films like Fred Amata’s Letters to a Stranger and Desmond Elliot’s Bursting Out serve as proof. Even Egbuson’s act in Biodun Stephen’s 2023 Big Love attests to this.

Veteran actor Madam Taiwo Ajai-Lycett plays the grandma. She dotes on Funmi, and gives us eloquent, touching monologues about her past and her wishes for the future of her granddaugh­ter. During a birthday celebratio­n purported to be her last because of a deadly cancer, she makes a final wish that moves Funmi and the audience to tears. The two stars offer honest performanc­es that make the experience somewhat bearable.

The stake at hand is the battle for Funmi’s heart, between her ex-boyfriend Ayo and her fiancé, Jason. Because of the unreasonab­le reaction to Jason when he first arrives, you almost do not take Funmi’s parents seriously. At first, we think that Jason’s only flaw is that he cannot pronounce gbegiri correctly, or that he doesn’t know to say something other than “Hi Mr. or Mrs. Alabi” to his Nigerian partner’s parents when they meet for the first time, but down the line, it is revealed that he is not the blue-eyed angel thrown into this cross-cultural clash. Ayo, who comes later, demonstrat­es enough love to conquer Jason’s unforgivab­le flaws.

Unfortunat­ely, Meeting Funmi’s Parents is another tired attempt at this overdone trope. It is expected that by now, foreign, or American spouses, in this case, would have learned the basics of the accepted culture they intend to marry into. Here in Meeting Funmi’s Parents, we encounter the same cultural conflicts again, and they aren’t even dealt with with nuance or subtlety. The romance is questionab­le, and the comedy is not funny. Even though it fails to make a strong impression suitable for Valentine’s season, it is not as disastrous as the 2020 Nigerian-Indian attempt.

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