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From the web · YNaijaSOURCE ↗
My Father’s Shadow Proves AMVCA Laurels and Cannes Acclaim Can Actually Fill Nigerian Cinema Seats

The concurrent success of high-concept Nigerian cinema across international and domestic circuits indicates a fundamental shift in how Nollywood measures commercial viability. At the 2026 Cannes Film Festival, the Esiri twins are drawing significant global acclaim for Clarissa, a Lagos-set reimagini

· 23 MAY 2026
LISTEN TO STRATA NOTE
COVER 16:9

While Nigerian cinema celebrates its Cannes moment, the real victory isn't Western validation—it's proving that African stories told with uncompromising artistic vision can command both critical respect and box office dominance at home. The Esiri twins' success with "Clarissa" signals Nollywood's evolution beyond the false choice between international prestige and local profitability, establishing a new paradigm where quality filmmaking becomes the continent's most potent soft power export. This isn't about impressing Europe; it's about African creators finally having the infrastructure and confidence to make films that speak to global audiences without abandoning their roots.

SUMMARY BY STRATA · ORIGINAL REPORTING BY YNAIJA

READ THE FULL STORY AT YNAIJA
film
From the web · YNaijaSOURCE ↗
My Father’s Shadow Proves AMVCA Laurels and Cannes Acclaim Can Actually Fill Nigerian Cinema Seats

The concurrent success of high-concept Nigerian cinema across international and domestic circuits indicates a fundamental shift in how Nollywood measures commercial viability. At the 2026 Cannes Film Festival, the Esiri twins are drawing significant global acclaim for Clarissa, a Lagos-set reimagini

· 23 MAY 2026
LISTEN TO STRATA NOTE
COVER 16:9

While Nigerian cinema celebrates its Cannes moment, the real victory isn't Western validation—it's proving that African stories told with uncompromising artistic vision can command both critical respect and box office dominance at home. The Esiri twins' success with "Clarissa" signals Nollywood's evolution beyond the false choice between international prestige and local profitability, establishing a new paradigm where quality filmmaking becomes the continent's most potent soft power export. This isn't about impressing Europe; it's about African creators finally having the infrastructure and confidence to make films that speak to global audiences without abandoning their roots.

SUMMARY BY STRATA · ORIGINAL REPORTING BY YNAIJA

READ THE FULL STORY AT YNAIJA