The air in the room is thick with the heavy silence of a son watching his mother fade. You can almost smell the antiseptic of the hospital wards clashing with the salt air of the harbour. In the film’s most haunting sequence, shadows stretch across the screen like long-held secrets, silhouettes dancing in a nighttime dialogue that feels less like a movie and more like a confession.
This is a signature of a filmmaker who understands that the most profound truths are often found in the dark.
Toronto, let’s be real. For too long, we have treated African cinema as something to be supported out of obligation, a charitable box to check in the name of diversity. King of Tema is demanding your attention. This is an act of creative defiance. It is the first feature film ever born from the literal pulse of Tema, told by the people who have breathed its dust and celebrated its triumphs. When Director Kobina and his team refused to cut scenes that made the story feel long, but kept its soul intact, they were protecting a legacy.
The emotional truth of this story is universal: a son’s desperation to save his mother from cancer, his back pressed so hard against the wall that he has no choice but to push back. We say we won’t do certain things until we are forced to, and King of Tema explores that razor’s edge where morality meets survival. It captures a specific pulse of Ghana while resonating with anyone who has ever loved someone enough to fight the impossible. This is storytelling that heals divisions by refusing to look away from the struggle.
If you consider yourself a leader in the cultural space, an educator, or a member of the diaspora who takes pride in the evolution of our narrative, your absence at Imagine Cinemas will be a quiet admission. Attendance is a social signal that you understand where the next frontier of global cinema is actually happening. We are moving into a space where we represent our true voice as a collective.
This film already carries the weight of “Achievement in Music” and “Achievement in Editing” from the 15th Ghana Movie Awards, proving that its technical brilliance matches its raw heart.
Imagine the room on June 12th and 13th. The lights go down, and for a few hours, the distance between Toronto and Tema vanishes. You will be sitting among the insiders, the ones who know that Ghanaian cinema is no longer emerging. It has arrived.
After the credits roll, the legendary Ivy Prosper will host a Q&A all the way from Ghana, bridging the gap between the source of the story and the global stage. This is your chance to engage with a narrative that refuses to wait for permission to be great.
Seats are limited, and the scarcity is real. This is an event meant to be experienced in a room full of people who feel the same fire for our stories. Do not let this moment pass you by. Be the person who can say they were there when Tema’s heartbeat first echoed through Toronto.
Grab your tickets now, because this story (and the community it represents) is moving forward with or without the world’s approval.
Event Details:
Imagine Cinemas Carlton
Friday, June 12th at 7:00 PM
Saturday, June 13th at 4:00 PM
Tickets: https://king-show-wocdw8mk.manus.space/