Single mother Anesu's life is turned upside down when her son enters her into a reality TV competition. A refreshing view of contemporary life in Harare, Zimbabwe, told through the lens of a... Read allSingle mother Anesu's life is turned upside down when her son enters her into a reality TV competition. A refreshing view of contemporary life in Harare, Zimbabwe, told through the lens of a classic romantic comedy.Single mother Anesu's life is turned upside down when her son enters her into a reality TV competition. A refreshing view of contemporary life in Harare, Zimbabwe, told through the lens of a classic romantic comedy.
Tomas Brickhill
- JJ
- (as Tomas Lutuli Brickhill)
Memory Bususu
- Mai Shupi
- (as Memory Buzuzu)
- Director
- Writer
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured reviews
This is a beautiful story. The lead character is absolutely gorgeous and did an excellent job. Supporting cast was wonderful too. Love watching the landscape of Harare, the music score was brilliantly selected.
Very engaging and well acted. Brilliant to see films like this coming from Zimbabwe. I watched it again with my family who enjoyed it.
I saw an article on The Guardian about the very first Zimbabwean film on Netflix. I like a bit of fluffy romcom from time to time, and it's Netflix that got me into them with the Christmas Prince films, so decided I'd give this one a go.
This is a romcom, so complaining that it's relatively predictable misses the point. Of course it's predictable - right down to the main characters being cooks/chefs which is so common in these films! - but it's also charming. The actors who play Anesu and Prince have good chemistry, the son is sweet and the sassy best friend is a romcom standard but she's great.
Of course it isn't perfect, and it's obviously been made on the smell of an oily rag. But within the limited budget it's done very well, and the fact they were able to use the actual set of the Zimbabwean cooking show they're competing on in the film was a definite bonus.
Lastly there are a few subplots that aren't as fleshed out as the could be - the relationship between Anesu and her mum is strained for most of the movie and resolved without any real discussion, and the storyline with Milly Ann sort of just ends. An extra five minutes explaining these two elements would have lifted this film even more.
Overall this is an enjoyable film. All the normal romcom tropes are here, but clearly done through a different lens to our Western primarily English-speaking film industries. If you like romcoms but want to see something other than the normal white faces in smalltown USA, this is worth your time.
Watched this purely because it's a Zimbabwean film!
Cheap as chips but you can tell they made every cent stretch. And it was just wonderful to hear the accents, Shona, mbira music and bird song in the background.
The actors are fully committed; there's some lovely friendships depicted and inter-generational support. I don't even like cooking but I really enjoyed this!
Cheap as chips but you can tell they made every cent stretch. And it was just wonderful to hear the accents, Shona, mbira music and bird song in the background.
The actors are fully committed; there's some lovely friendships depicted and inter-generational support. I don't even like cooking but I really enjoyed this!
I discovered this movie on Netflix Australia the other night after scrolling, scrolling, scrolling...ooh - wait a minute - did I just find a movie from Zimbabwe? Wow - never seen one. Well I'm so glad I dived in, because it was a treat!
There was some great acting, some popping chemistry between Anesu and her swooney suitor, lots of laughs - and I must mention the fantastic music tracks - I wrote them all down so I can explore later!
'Cook Off' gives us a rare glimpse into life in Zimbabwe - or life in a Zimbabwean film I guess, whatever - because in that glimpse, of course, we see the same funny, silly, cranky, sweet, scared, spunky humans doing their thing, having their dramas, loves and laughs - just like all over this tiny, spinning globe we're clinging on to.
Meanwhile, I'm really looking forward to the next Zimbabwean film.
There was some great acting, some popping chemistry between Anesu and her swooney suitor, lots of laughs - and I must mention the fantastic music tracks - I wrote them all down so I can explore later!
'Cook Off' gives us a rare glimpse into life in Zimbabwe - or life in a Zimbabwean film I guess, whatever - because in that glimpse, of course, we see the same funny, silly, cranky, sweet, scared, spunky humans doing their thing, having their dramas, loves and laughs - just like all over this tiny, spinning globe we're clinging on to.
Meanwhile, I'm really looking forward to the next Zimbabwean film.
Did you know
- TriviaThis is the first movie from Zimbabwe to stream on Netflix.
Details
- Runtime
- 1h 41m(101 min)
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 2.35 : 1
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