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In 2007, he was given the lifetime Achievement award by AMAA (African movie Academy Awards). Osita Iheme's performance alongside fellow actor and his longtime friend Chinedu Ikedieze in the 2002 film Aki na Ukwa is still widely spoken about and the duo, especially Osita's character, on-screen trending through memes since 2019 on Twitter and ...
This is a list of films / movies produced in Nigeria by year of release. This film-related list is incomplete ; you can help by adding missing items . ( October 2021 )
Aki and Pawpaw is a 2021 Nigerian comedy film co-produced by Play Network Studios and Film One Entertainment. [1] Directed by Biodun Stephen, it was a remake of the 2002 Aki na Ukwa movie produced by Chinedu Ikedieze and Osita Iheme. [2] [3] [1] It was released on 15 December 2021, and began showing in cinemas nationwide on 17 December 2021. [4]
Iwájú (pronounced [ī.wá.d͡ʒú]) [1] is an animated science fiction miniseries produced by Walt Disney Animation Studios and the Pan-African British-based entertainment company Kugali Media for the streaming service Disney+.
Chinedu Ikedieze // ⓘ, MFR [1] [2] (born 12 December 1977) is a Nigerian actor, [3] [4] entrepreneur and investor. He is best known for playing alongside Osita Iheme in the 2002 film Aki na Ukwa. [5]
The following are the highest-grossing Nigerian films of all time in Nigerian cinemas. The 2024 film Everybody Loves Jenifa currently leads the chart, with ₦1,600,000,000 grossed over a few months. Revenues from special screenings, DVD sales, online streaming, and theatrical screenings outside English-speaking West Africa are excluded from ...
3 awards at the 8th Africa Movie Academy Awards including Achievement in Costume Design, Achievement in Visual effects, and Best Nigerian film. [3] Last Flight to Abuja: Obi Emelonye: Omotola Jalade Ekeinde Hakeem Kae-Kazim Jim Iyke: Disaster / thriller: Africa Movie Academy Award for Best Film by an African Living Abroad: Fuelling Poverty ...
With the emergence of New Nigerian Cinema, more Nigerian acts wanted roles on the big screen in order to boost their resume, refusing to star in video films; Ghanaian actors as a result took advantage of this, as they become more prominent on Nigerian video films which were already taking a down turn at this time, but still very popular. [46] [70]