Gingerrr comes to Netflix and Kava this month. The nine-nomination, zero-win film — Nollywood’s most debated release of 2025 — is about to reach the largest audience it has ever had. The jury gave it nothing. The algorithm will give it everyone.
The timing is its own story. Five days after the AMVCA jury’s collective refusal to reward the most-nominated film in the ceremony’s history, Gingerrr moves to global streaming. The debate that has been contained to Nigerian film criticism discourse — is this a great commercial film or an overrated one? — is about to open up to every Netflix subscriber in Nigeria, across Africa, and in the diaspora who clicks on it because it is new and has a recognisable cast.
What Streaming Does to This Specific Argument
The AMVCA jury verdict was specific: the craft, the writing, the acting, and the overall achievement of other films in the same year were judged to be superior. My Father’s Shadow took five awards. To Kill A Monkey took three. Colours of Fire took three. Gingerrr took zero. That verdict is the institutional assessment.
Netflix’s viewership data will produce a different kind of verdict — one measured not in jury deliberation but in play rates, completion percentages, and the specific Nigerian audience behaviour that makes a film trend on the platform. Gingerrr has Bisola Aiyeola and Lateef Adedimeji in the lead roles. Both are among the most commercially reliable draws in Nigerian streaming. The film’s ensemble energy and accessible tonal register are exactly the qualities that drive high completion rates on a platform where most viewers make their decision in the first ten minutes.
The streaming performance of Gingerrr on Netflix this month will not reverse the AMVCA verdict. But it will add data to a conversation that has been almost entirely critical in its framing. Commercial reach and critical recognition are different measurements of different things. The film that critics called overrated and the jury ignored may be the film that Nigerians watch most this month. Both facts can be true at once. The industry needs to hold them simultaneously rather than using one to dismiss the other.
RollCallAfrica’s review of Gingerrr — published this week — stands at 6.8: Watchable. It is a competent commercial ensemble film that does not earn the nine nominations the industry gave it. It may well earn the Netflix audience it is about to receive. Those are not contradictions. They are the same film operating in two different commercial ecosystems, each of which has its own valid measure of success.
Sources: YNaija (May 2026 — Netflix/Kava release confirmation), AMVCA 2026 nominations and results. — Rotimi Fash. RollCallAfrica, 14 May 2026.
