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Old and Sweet – Nollywood Movie Review

3 Min Read

This is a dramatic romance that tackles the taboo of age-gap love and family hostility. It shows how love can come from unexpected places and how families can challenge what they cannot accept.

In a quiet town lives Amaka, a woman in her late 40s. She has raised children, a home she kept, and life is moving steadily. She never expected much more than peace. One day, she meets Tunde, a young man in his 20s, energetic, hopeful, working hard for his future. Tunde helped Amaka when her car broke down. They talked. He made her laugh. She felt young again.

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Their friendship grows. Late-night drives, walks by the river, talks about dreams then Amaka remembers herself; Tunde sees a woman full of depth. Neither planned a romance, but the feelings came anyway. Amaka’s children watch the change and grow skeptical. They whisper, judge, and fear their mother is risking everything.

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They say: “He’s too young.” “What will people say?” “Is this real love or just thrill?”
Amaka tries to bridge those gaps. She calms her children, tells them who Tunde is; respectful, kind, honest. But the children hold fast. They bring up social status, age, and scandal. Tunde tries to earn their trust by helping around the house, offering support. Amaka stands between her children and her heart. She wonders if she must choose between love or approval.

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The movie tenses when Tunde gets a job offer abroad. Amaka sees it as an escape, but is it an escape from judgment or from love? The children oppose his leaving; they claim he’ll hurt her. Amaka stands up for herself. She says love isn’t about age but about respect, trust. Tunde then asks her: “Will you come with me or stay here alone?” She hesitates. She knows what she leaves behind…children, reputation, comfort. She also knows what she gains: truth, love, renewal.

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In the end, Amaka stands in the dawn light, suitcase by her side, her children behind her, Tunde waiting. She faces them all and then steps forward. The final scene is quiet: road ahead visible, car starts, Tunde smiles, Amaka breathes deep. The film ends with hope rather than certainty, she has chosen her heart.

Director: Nosa Rex (Bigthings Production)
Cast: Nosa Rex, Lilian Afegbai, Eucharia Anunobi
Runtime: 89 minutes
Watch here.

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