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After a while of working very hard under her boss, there was an opening for a higher position in the company. Liah “ Sharon Ooja” worked as an intern to Hauwa “ Funke Akindele Bello”, Hauwa was the terrorist boss harsh, cruel and unkind, she tormented the living day light out of her staff, she made work a living hell and constantly made her feel inferior of herself at all times, but Liah despite the tears and pain kept on consoling herself and working hard to please this her boss who just couldn’t be pleased. The sound track was nice and they had some nice costumes, but I felt they should have done better with changing the hair styles of the ladies, I really can’t tell how long the movie was shot for, they technically had the same hairstyle all through that was a very bad sign for me. The movie was written and directed by Chinaza Onuzuo, just a few cast were used, the production, cinematography and cast well really good in playing each role well. I guess the major problem was that I went in with loads of expectations having seen the trailer and the cast of the movie, my expectations were cut short, as I felt so empty leaving the cinema, didn’t feel like I had value for my money, I hope they are reenact better movies in future if they must. "I'm not going to kill an animal for a movie," Coppola reaffirmed. "I'm not going to kill anything for any reason." Despite Coppola's statements, this scene of animal cruelty stands out in "Apocalypse Now" as horrifying for all the wrong reasons.Who is the boss was a very basic movie that held no great substance, I sincerely felt the trailer was way better than the movie itself, the movie reminded me so much of a Hollywood movie called “ Little” of 2019, it looked exactly like that movie and just felt like we were watching it over again but with the Nigerian cast and crew, it was too similar in nature, story line and direction, except for the fact that they couldn’t make the main boss “Funke” look little. To prove his point, Coppola made sure to emphasize that he refused to have an extra water buffalo around to kill in case extra takes were needed. "I did not direct it or anything, that was the way they do it," Coppola said to USA Today. While intended to be a visual parallel to Willard's plan to assassinate Kurtz with a machete, the sight of an animal killed on-screen is jarring enough to render that thematic undercurrent irrelevant.ĭecades after the film's release, Coppola has stood by the scene, reaffirming that he was merely documenting reality itself.
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This was apparently a real-life practice that was already underway before cameras started rolling, with director Francis Ford Coppola filming the ritual as it occurred. For a climactic scene involving a ritual performed by an Ifugao tribe, a water buffalo is killed on-screen.
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