Terminus is a health and crime watch film that seeks to create awareness about the dangers of pharmaceutical products mostly shipped to Africa and some other parts of the world.
Two things I loved about terminus were representation and continuity. Not long after the movie starts, we are introduced to a female president who is not just occupying the seat but dealing with a national crisis in the pharmaceutical industry. We also see the director of operations from Organized Crimes Ghana being a female.
Terminus was strategically designed to show women taking the lead in high-ranking roles in society. Every female needs to watch this film. Way to go with women empowerment. The film’s agenda for women’s empowerment was well-delivered. It also provided an accurate representation of the government, persons living with disability, and security forces.
The characters were shape shifting from good to bad without any trace of their previous phase. One moment Adjetey Anang is a villain and the next, he is on the side of the honorable madam president. It was marvelous how these actors were able to easily switch from hero to villain and vice versa.
This movie simply provides new hope for the rise of the dwindling movie industry in Ghana.