Sidechic Gang (2018)
30KSidechic Gang: Directed by Peter Sedufia. With Aaron Adatsi, Ricky Adelayitor, Beverly Afaglo, Stacy Afful. “Three female friends find out they can make fortunes from exposing cheating husbands and boyfriends after making tons of cash unexpectedly from reporting a cheating husband to the wife. They quit their ushering job to set up “Sidechic Gang” – an agency solely dedicated to clamping down the side chick menace. Their services are available to only women. After few exposè, their Sidechic Gang becomes popular, attracting traffic from victims of side chicks. This translates into more cash for them. The men in the town are unhappy with the sudden popularity of the gang. The Sidechic Gang’s biggest deal is yet to hit them. It comes from a filthy rich man who suspects his fiancée is cheating on him. He is aware the gang does not serve men, but, he is willing to pay anything it costs to justify his suspicion. The gang takes on the task. They know what this means for their bank account. Their greatest opposition, however, is the many aggrieved men who benefit from the services of side chicks, and would do anything to ensure they fail. Will the Sidechic Gang succeed in their quest or, the aggrieved men will?”
“After exactly a year we finally get to see the second feature film from Peter Sedufia. His last film, a period piece, Ketete, was received with critical acclaim and so much talk that had everyone waiting to see what next, he had in store for us film lovers. the anxiety got even worse after the title of the film was first announced. We just couldnu0026#39;t wait to see what the SideChic Gang was going to be about.u003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003eIn SideChic Gang, three ladies find out they can make fortunes from exposing cheating husbands and boyfriends after making tons of cash unexpectedly from reporting a cheating husband to the wife. They quit their ushering job to set up u0026quot;Sidechic Gangu0026quot; – an agency solely dedicated to clamping down the side chick menace. Their very fruitful run at this begins to face opposition from the many aggrieved men who they had exposed after they are hired by a very rich man who suspects his fiancée to be cheating on him.u003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003eOn the surface you can easily tell this story was written by a woman, right? Rachel Adikwuu0026#39;s story is brilliant and the screenplay does justice to it. If the SideChic Gang really gets set up you can imagine how many women would queue up for hours each day from the crack of dawn, to enlist their services, just as seen in this film.u003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003eNana Ama McBrown, Lydia Forson and Sika Osei are simply flawless in this film. The onscreen chemistry and cohesion between the three lead stars is to die for. All through the film they complement each otheru0026#39;s performance and there is never a scene where any outshines the others. The character development and their delivery make it easy for you to pick up on each characteru0026#39;s strength and weaknesses and its impressive how all these details about the characters goes on to complete the bigger picture in this film.u003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003eThe vast variety of cast and characters in this film canu0026#39;t be overlooked. Even from the extras (mostly those who played clients to the SideChic Gang), you get to see an array of decent acting performances that added more to the depth of this film, performance wise. You canu0026#39;t take anything away from the elements of humor in this film either. It sits well in the comedy genre and you are sure to laugh too many times. Not as a result of senseless over dramatized comedic acts or shenanigans, but as a result of pure wit and classy sarcasm, and three lead ladies give a good dose of that.u003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003eThe filmu0026#39;s story appears to only expose men and their usual excuses/defense for cheating when caught. But by the end it delivers a strong message that canu0026#39;t be ignored at all. Nobody is perfect and sometimes a situation that seems too distant could be closer to us than we think and how we react to such situations seem to define who we really are.u003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003eThe cinematography uses well captured steady shots and shaky camera handling sparingly, to set a tone of uneasiness in some of the scenes. Sometimes the camera says the things the characters arenu0026#39;t and, in this film, you get to see that a lot. Details are everything in film and this new piece from OldFilm Productions packs that in good measure.u003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003eThe editing and color grading used in this film gives it a decent cinematic aesthetic feel. But we felt a bit of disconnect in the early minutes of the film considering that all the artworks for the film we had seen had very strong and solid color shades. The brown toned color grading used in to the final cut we got see in the cinemas presented a huge contrast from what we had seen in all the artworks and it took us a while for that to settle in.u003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003eIf there was anything that was really missing it this film it would be its own distinct unique sound score like what we got to hear from Worlasi in Peteru0026#39;s last film. Maybe there was and we missed it. Nonetheless, the film does boast of some very impressive choice of soundtracks and mood music that complements the scenes in this film.u003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003eThis film scores an impressive 8/10 on our rating scale. In comparison Keteke (read our review on that here), remains a much stronger film for us than SideChic Gang. The first cut is the deepest like they say and Keteke is that first cut from Peter Sedufia, feature film wise. But the latter equally delivers on being an enjoyable experience at the cinemas with family and friends.u003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003eIn our books Peter Sedufia is two-for-two so far. And we are eager to see how far heu0026#39;s able to go with the SideChic Gang as well.”