AMVCA 2026 Winners List: My Father’s Shadow Dominates Africa Magic Viewers’ Choice Awards in Lagos

The 12th Africa Magic Viewers’ Choice Awards (AMVCA 2026) unfolded in grand style at Eko Hotel & Suites, Lagos, solidifying its reputation as the continent’s most prestigious celebration of film, television, and digital content.


Hosted by comedian Bovi Ugboma and actress Nomzamo Mbatha, this year’s ceremony saw riveting competition, historic wins, and creatives from across Africa take home coveted statuettes.

Here’s a comprehensive editorial report of every major winner from the night.


Best Movie
🏆 My Father’s Shadow — Rachel Dargavel & Funmbi Ogunbanwo

Best Director
🏆 Akinola Davies Jr.My Father’s Shadow

Akinola Davies Jr.’s film didn’t just win; it towered. From writing to sound to direction, it was the night’s undeniable centerpiece.



Best Lead Actor
🏆 Uzor ArukweColours of Fire

Best Lead Actress
🏆 Linda Ejiofor‑SuleimanThe Serpent’s Gift

Best Supporting Actor
🏆 Bucci FranklinTo Kill a Monkey

Best Supporting Actress
🏆 Linda Ejiofor-Suleiman — The Herd


Best Cinematography
🏆 To Kill a Monkey — Kabelo Thathe

Best Sound Design
🏆 My Father’s Shadow — Pius Fatoke & CJ Mirra

Best Art Direction
🏆 Colours of Fire — Ajamolaya Bunmi

Best Costume Design
🏆 Valerie Okeke — Colours of Fire

Best Makeup
🏆 Adeola Thelma Bamgboye — Lisabi (A Legend Is Born)


Best Writing in a Movie
🏆 Wale Davies — My Father’s Shadow


Best Writing in a TV Series
🏆 MTV Shuga Masahariki

Best Short Film
🏆 Hussainin — Orire Nwani & Josh Olaoluwa


Indigenous Language Film Categories

AMVCA’s continental expansion was evident in these wins:

West Africa:Lisabi (A Legend Is Born), North Africa:Artal Alhanin: Our Memories, Central Africa:MabandaEast Africa:Addis Fikir, South Africa:Tlhaho Ya Mosadi



More than anything, AMVCA 2026 will be remembered for how decisively it crowned My Father’s Shadow as the year’s most important film, while also spreading recognition across regions, languages, and formats, from indigenous epics to digital creators.

The ceremony felt less like a popularity contest and more like a referendum on where African storytelling is headed: technically refined, culturally grounded, and globally aware.

For once, the loudest statement of the night wasn’t made on the red carpet, it was made on screen

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