The 12th edition of the Africa Magic Viewers’ Choice Awards (AMVCA) lit up Lagos on May 9, 2026, transforming the Exhibition Center of the Eko Hotel and Suites into a cathedral of African storytelling. For one night, the continent’s finest filmmakers, actors, and technicians gathered not just to collect trophies, but to bear witness to an industry that has matured into a global cultural force.
This year’s ceremony marked several watershed moments: the expansion of indigenous language categories to include North and Central Africa, the coronation of new acting royalty, and a subtle but significant shift in how African cinema sees itself—not as an emerging industry, but as a dominant one.
The Setting and Significance
The AMVCA has always been more than an awards show. Since its inception in 2013, it has served as the most prestigious validation of African screen talent, broadcast live to over 50 countries. The 2026 edition, however, carried extra weight. With 32 categories—18 decided by jury, 11 by audience vote, and three special recognition awards—the ceremony represented the most inclusive iteration yet.
Veteran actress Joke Silva served as Head Judge, bringing decades of artistic integrity to the evaluation process. Her appointment signaled the AMVCA’s commitment to balancing commercial success with artistic merit—a tension that would define many of the night’s most contested categories.
The expansion of indigenous language categories to include Best Indigenous Language Film (North Africa) and Best Indigenous Language Film (Central Africa) was not merely administrative. It was a political statement. For too long, African cinema has been defined by its Anglophone and Francophone outputs. By formally recognizing films in languages from the Sahel to the Horn of Africa, the AMVCA acknowledged what audiences have always known: Africa’s stories are told in hundreds of tongues, and each deserves its stage.
The Big Winners: A New Guard Emerges
Best Lead Actor: Mike Ezuruonye for Oversabi Aunty
In what many considered an upset, Mike Ezuruonye took home the Best Lead Actor award for his role in Oversabi Aunty. The category was arguably the most competitive of the night, featuring William Benson (To Kill A Monkey), Lateef Adedimeji (Lisabi: A Legend Is Born), Wale Ojo (3 Cold Dishes), and industry titan Kanayo O. Kanayo (Grandpa Must Obey).
Benson had entered the night as the critical favorite. His portrayal of Efe—a troubled, morally conflicted tech genius grappling with poverty and betrayal in To Kill A Monkey—had earned praise for its “restrained yet powerful” emotional range. The series, produced by Kemi Adetiba and distributed via Netflix, had gone viral and amplified Benson’s reach across the continent. Lateef Adedimeji, meanwhile, brought the weight of a historical epic and his own production credentials to the race.
Ezuruonye’s victory suggests that the jurors valued comedic precision and commercial accessibility as much as dramatic intensity. Oversabi Aunty, a film that navigates the chaos of modern Nigerian family life with wit and warmth, allowed Ezuruonye to showcase a versatility that sometimes gets overlooked in an industry obsessed with “serious” roles. It was a win that celebrated the actor as entertainer, not just artist.
Best Lead Actress: Sola Sobowale for Her Excellency
The Best Lead Actress category was a study in generational contrast. Sola Sobowale, Nigeria’s “King of Boys,” added another crown to her collection for her role in Her Excellency. She faced formidable competition from Bimbo Akintola (To Kill A Monkey), whose layered portrayal of Inspector Mo Ogunlesi—a cybercrime investigator battling grief and PTSD—had critics calling for a sweep. Scarlet Gomez (Behind The Scenes) brought the commercial firepower of a N2+ billion box office hit, while Genoveva Umeh (The Herd) represented the industry’s exciting new wave.
Sobowale’s win was a testament to star power and consistency. In Her Excellency, she reportedly delivered a performance that combined the political gravitas of King of Boys with a new vulnerability. At an age when many actresses find roles drying up, Sobowale continues to expand what is possible for women in Nollywood. Her victory was not just personal; it was a statement about longevity and relevance in an industry that often worships youth.

Best Supporting Actor: Bucci Franklin for To Kill A Monkey
If To Kill A Monkey lost the top acting prizes, it found consolation in the supporting categories. Bucci Franklin won Best Supporting Actor for his role in Kemi Adetiba’s crime thriller. Franklin beat out a crowded field that included Lateef Adedimeji (nominated twice for Gingerrr and Red Circle), Gabriel Afolayan (Colours Of Fire), and Femi Adebayo (King Of Thieves 2).
Franklin’s win highlighted the depth of talent in Nigeria’s supporting ranks. In a film defined by its moral complexity, Franklin provided the human anchor that made the thriller’s twists emotionally resonant rather than merely sensational.
Best Supporting Actress: Linda Ejiofor for The Herd
Linda Ejiofor continued her remarkable awards season by winning Best Supporting Actress for The Herd. Ejiofor had already generated buzz for her lead role in The Serpent’s Gift, but it was her supporting turn—described as “grounded” and culturally rich—that earned her the AMVCA statuette.
Ejiofor’s double presence in the conversation (lead and supporting) underscored her versatility. In a year where she was nominated for work across multiple genres and languages, this win felt like the industry acknowledging an actress hitting her prime.
The Technical Triumphs
Best Director: Akinola Davies Jr. for My Father’s Shadow
Perhaps the most significant win of the night—for the industry’s future, if not its present—was Akinola Davies Jr. taking Best Director for My Father’s Shadow. Davies and his brother Wale had already claimed the Outstanding Debut award at the 2026 EE BAFTA Film Awards, giving their film international credibility before the AMVCA jury even sat down.
My Father’s Shadow represents a new kind of African cinema: visually ambitious, internationally co-produced, yet deeply rooted in local specificity. The film’s “measured storytelling” and distinctive visual style suggest a generation of filmmakers who have absorbed the lessons of both Nollywood’s commercial instincts and European art house traditions.
Davies Jr. beat out legends including Tunde Kelani (Cordelia) and Asurf Amuwa Oluseyi (3 Cold Dishes), proving that the AMVCA is willing to honor evolution over tradition when the work demands it.
Best Overall Movie: The People’s Choice
The Best Overall Movie category encapsulated the central tension of contemporary African cinema: commercial success versus artistic ambition. The nominees—Gingerrr, The Herd, My Father’s Shadow, 3 Cold Dishes, The Serpent’s Gift, and Behind The Scenes—represented a cross-section of the year’s most impactful films.
Gingerrr, with its N300+ million box office haul and steady audience turnout, represented the commercial pole. The Herd, noted for its “emotional tone” and storytelling depth, occupied the critical center. My Father’s Shadow brought international prestige, while 3 Cold Dishes—produced by Burna Boy and directed by Asurf Amuwa Oluseyi—blended musical celebrity with cinematic experimentation.
While the winner was not immediately confirmed in available reports, the nomination list alone told a story of an industry no longer choosing between profit and prestige, but demanding both.
The New Categories: Expanding the Map
The introduction of Best Indigenous Language Film (North Africa) and Best Indigenous Language Film (Central Africa) was the night’s most important structural change. These categories joined existing competitions for West, East, and Southern African indigenous language films, creating a truly continental framework.
The West Africa category featured The Serpent’s Gift, Lisabi: A Legend Is Born, Labake Olododo, Olorisha, and Aljana—films that proved Yoruba-language cinema remains a vibrant commercial and artistic force. The expansion means that filmmakers working in Amharic, Hausa, Berber, Lingala, and dozens of other languages now have a direct path to AMVCA recognition.
This is not tokenism. It is an acknowledgment that some of Africa’s most sophisticated storytelling happens in languages that never appear at Cannes or Sundance. By creating these categories, the AMVCA has effectively declared that African cinema’s future is polyglot.
The Streaming Effect
One cannot discuss the 2026 AMVCA without acknowledging the platform shift that has redefined how African content reaches audiences. To Kill A Monkey gained “massive visibility through Netflix.” Behind The Scenes combined theatrical success (N2+ billion) with strong Netflix performance. Even films with traditional theatrical releases now live or die by their streaming afterlife.
This has democratized access but complicated the awards calculus. A film like Gingerrr, with its N300+ million theatrical run, must now compete with streaming-native content that may never see a cinema screen but reaches millions more eyeballs. The AMVCA’s hybrid jury-audience voting system attempts to balance these metrics, but the tension between box office and bandwidth will only intensify.
The Fashion, The Moments, The Memes
No AMVCA review would be complete without acknowledging the red carpet. Nigerian award shows have become global fashion events, and the 2026 edition reportedly maintained this tradition. While specific fashion moments were not detailed in available reports, the ceremony’s Lagos setting guaranteed a collision of traditional textiles, avant-garde silhouettes, and the kind of sartorial risk-taking that has made Nigerian celebrities fixtures on international best-dressed lists.
The hosting duties, the acceptance speeches, the inevitable technical difficulties—these are the moments that transform an industry ceremony into cultural memory. Based on previous editions, one can assume that social media platforms were alight with commentary, that at least one speech ran too long, and that a relative unknown became an overnight sensation.
What It All Means
The 2026 AMVCA was a snapshot of an industry in productive tension. It honored veterans like Sola Sobowale and Kanayo O. Kanayo while elevating newcomers like Genoveva Umeh and Akinola Davies Jr. It celebrated films that earned billions in naira and films that earned laurels at BAFTA. It expanded its geographic scope while remaining anchored in Lagos.
Most importantly, it demonstrated that African cinema no longer needs external validation to feel legitimate. The AMVCA is not a stepping stone to the Oscars; it is a destination in itself. When Mike Ezuruonye and Sola Sobowale held their trophies aloft, they were not being recognized by a foreign academy or a colonial jury. They were being honored by their own—critics, audiences, and peers who understand the specific alchemy required to tell African stories for African people.
The 12th AMVCA was not perfect. No awards show is. But it was necessary. In a year when global cinema has struggled to find its footing, African filmmakers are running—sprinting—toward a future they are defining on their own terms. The herd is moving. The serpent has given its gift. And the shadow of our fathers has never looked more like a roadmap than it does right now.
The Africa Magic Viewers’ Choice Awards continue to serve as the definitive benchmark for screen excellence across the continent. For filmmakers and audiences alike, the message of 2026 was clear: the best stories are still being told right here, in our languages, on our terms.











