The criminal fringe meets sexy high-stakes espionage in this rough-and-ready Nollywood action sequel
Considering it had a budget hundreds of times smaller than Fast & Furious, this sequel to last year’s top Nollywood grosser, Merry Men: The Real Yoruba Demons, makes a reasonable stab at being a Nigerian version of the
Hollywood action-film franchise. Said merry men are four Lagos playboys who are showing dangerous signs of shrugging off their roguish pasts and settling down, when Abuja politician Dame Maduka kidnaps one of their wives and blackmails them into jacking crucial evidence in her forthcoming graft trial.
You couldn’t call Merry Men 2 stunningly original, but director Moses Inwang and producer Ayo Makun (who had a hand in several top-end 2010 Nollywood films and also stars in this film) have studied the Fast & Furious handbook. Inhabiting that just-in-the-movies crossover between the criminal fringe and sexy high-stakes espionage, the film ticks off flashy jump-cut hotel-foyer entrances, shameless consumerism and shady paramours coming back from the dead, then slaps a family-values rosette on top. Tonal swerves from thriller to
comedy aren’t any wilder than those between Vin Diesel and Ludacris, even if the film doesn’t quite have the same level of control a multimillion-dollar screenwriter buys you. It’s not so easy keeping up the tension in a central standoff scene when there are three laser dots hovering over one character’s penis.