Chibuike Ibe’s 75-minute Nollywood quick-burn opens with a sexual-assault accusation and never pauses for breath. Beverly Naya brings bruised credibility to the survivor role, while Enyinna Nwigwe’s compassionate doctor morphs convincingly into a vigilante avenger, letting the film pose the uncomfortable question: does answering violence with violence simply breed another predator? The tight running time keeps tension high and the plot lean, a welcome antidote to the genre’s usual bloat.
Yet the movie’s scrappy urgency is also its weakness. Patchy sound, under-lit night scenes and a bargain-bin synth score scream micro-budget, while the supporting cast are sketched in such broad strokes that the rapist feels more like a plot device than a person. A late-film twist—that the hero’s righteous crusade is awakening his own “demon”—adds moral texture, but it’s undercut by a coincidence-driven climax and a rushed voice-over that tells us we all carry monsters instead of proving it cinematically.
“Demon Inside” plays like an activist pamphlet dressed in thriller clothes: blunt, righteous, and timely, but cinematically thin. It will spark Twitter debates about consent and retribution, yet it never achieves the lingering power of richer Nigerian crime dramas. Worth catching if you want to see low-budget African cinema confront #MeToo head-on—just don’t expect the depth or polish that the subject deserves.