04/07/2026
Can you honestly say you'll choose love over money when you've spent your entire life suffering?
Personally, I don't know.
Because by the time I finished watching MOTHER'S BARGAIN, I wasn't even sure who the villain of the story was anymore.
At first, I thought I knew exactly where this film was heading.
Young girl. Poor background. Rich old man. Controlling mother. Poor boyfriend she's genuinely in love with.
I've watched enough Nollywood films to know where that road usually leads.
But what surprised me about this film was that it refused to make anybody completely right or completely wrong.
Let's start with Adaora.
First of all, I genuinely loved her character.
She's a first-class economics graduate, young, idealistic, and still believes in something a lot of people lose faith in very early in life: love.
Not money. Not status. Not comfort. But Love. And honestly, I understood her.
Because when the film first introduced Chief Coker, I was also looking at him the same way she was looking at him.
"Sir, thank you very much, but go and find your age group."
Then there's her mother, Felicia.
This woman frustrated me. She also broke my heart. Because every terrible decision she made came from one place which is fear.
Fear of poverty. Fear of suffering. Fear of dying poor after already spending most of her life suffering.
The way she kept repeating that "love doesn't pay bills" didn't even sound like an opinion anymore. It sounded like trauma.
And that's what made her character brilliant for me.
Because she wasn't evil for the sake of being evil. She was desperate. Dangerously desperate.
Now, let's talk about Chike.
You know those Nollywood boyfriends that are introduced to us as hardworking, humble, ambitious young men?
The type that smiles too much. The type that keeps saying, "Baby, trust me."
Yeah. Those ones.. That's who Chike was.
The moment Chike started talking about forex trading, my spirit immediately became uncomfortable.
And unfortunately, my spirit was right.
Because the speed with which this guy's entire life collapsed after proposing marriage was something else for me.
Imagine accepting a proposal and police officers show up before your engagement excitement even settles.
That scene genuinely shocked me. Not because he got arrested. But because Adora's entire understanding of love was going to collapse in a flash.
It's one thing to be poor. It's another thing entirely to discover that the person you loved never actually existed.
Now let's discuss Chief Coker.
This man completely surprised me.
When he was introduced, I immediately categorized him.
Rich older man. Powerful politician. Wants a young beautiful wife. Normal Nollywood setup.
But then the film kept doing something annoying. It kept making him a genuinely good person.
Every single time I wanted to dislike him, he would do something kind.
He helped Chike. He protected Adaora. He never forced her. He remained patient. He kept loving her even when it was obvious she didn't love him back.
And honestly, that's what made this movie interesting.
Because suddenly, the old rich man wasn't the villain. He was the safest person in the room.
Now, can we talk about Felicia's greed? Because wow.
This woman started with "my daughter deserves financial security" and somehow graduated to "let's pray this man dies quickly so we can inherit."
There was a point where I genuinely paused and asked myself: "Madam, exactly where are we going with this?"
Because one thing is wanting your child to escape poverty. Another thing entirely is trying to speed up somebody's journey to his ancestors.
And the moment I discovered that Chief's medication had been tampered with? I just froze.
Because suddenly, this wasn't about ambition anymore. This was obsession. And honestly, that's what I found most tragic about Felicia's character.
She spent so much time trying to escape poverty that she became a prisoner of greed.
Now, one of the biggest questions I kept asking myself throughout this film was:
Would Adaora have still chosen Chief if Chike had never been exposed?
Personally, I don't know. Because Chike's betrayal fundamentally changed how she viewed love.
She entered that marriage believing she was sacrificing happiness for security. But somewhere along the line, she discovered something she hadn't considered.
Safety can also be love. Peace can also be love. Protection can also be love.
And sometimes, the person who truly loves you isn't the person who gives you butterflies. It's the person who makes sure you never have to suffer alone.
That realization completely changed how I viewed the ending.
Because when Chief agreed to give her the divorce she wanted, secured her future, gave her financial independence, and still wished her well, I literally understood why she went back.
Not because of the money. Not because of the houses. Not because of the trips to Japan.
But because for the first time in the entire film, somebody loved her without asking her to suffer first.
Now, I do have another question.
Do you think Adaora actually fall in love with Chief? Or did she fall in love with the safety and peace he provided?
Because honestly, I kept asking myself that question even after the credits rolled.
And maybe that's exactly what makes this film intriguing for me.
It's not really a story about choosing love over money.
It's a story about discovering that sometimes, love doesn't always arrive looking the way we expected it to.
I enjoyed watching this film. With my full chest, I recommend it to everyone who really wants to see a beautiful film.
Title: Mother's Bargain (showing only on Uchenna Mbunabo TV on YouTube) featuring legendary Emeka Ike, Chinenye Nnebe and a couple of other amazing actors.