Dr Raymond Anyiam-Osigwe, Chief Executive Officer of AMAA, appreciated the team that made the award ceremony a reality.
Nollywood actor, Femi Adebayo, has emerged as the Best Actor in a Supporting Role for his historical thriller, âJagun Jagun,â at the 20th Africa Movie Academy Awards (AMAA), held on Saturday in Lagos.
Adebayoâs âJagun Jagunâ which earlier attracted seven nominations, also clinched the Achievement Award in visual effect and make-up respectively.
Actress Elsie Abang won the âBest Actress in Supporting Roleâ in âKIPKEMBOIâ, while Michell Lemuya emerged the âBest Young Promising Actorâ in âNAWIâ.
Also, Zolisa Xaluva won âBest Actor in Leading Roleâ in âThe Queenstown Kingâ, while Jackie Appiah Emery âBest Actress in Leading Role in âRed Carpetâ.
The award for best feature film by a director went to âLetters to Goddoâ, by Harry Bentil, and Jahmil X.T Qubeka won the best director in âThe Queenstown Kingsâ.
Souleymane Cissé from Mali, Nacer Khemir from Tunisia and Haile Gerima from Ethiopia bagged lifetime achievement awards.
Alain Gomis from Senegal and Gabon as well as Tsitsi Dangarembga from Zimbabwe won special recognition awards.
âThe Weekendâ bagged the AMAA Best Film award as it also clinched the Achievement Award in Screenplay, Achievement Award in Cinematography and the National Film and Video Censors Board Award for best Nigerian film.
âOut of Boundâ won the achievement award in Production, âBoda Loveâ clinched the achievement award in Soundtrack, âMai Martabaâ bagged the achievement award in Costume Design while âQueenstown Kingâ attracted the achievement award in sound.
The achievement award in editing went to âUnder The Hanging Treeâ.
âThe Last Shoemaker,â from Uganda, won the Efere Ozako Award for best short film, Kenyaâs âCounterPunchâ clinched the Jubril Malafia best animation award while the best documentary went to âThe Nearest Smell of Gunpowderâ from Mozambique.
The Michael Anyiam-Osigwe award for best film by an African living abroad went to âUnder the Hanging Treeâ, from Namibia, while South Africaâs âThe Queenstown Kingâ clinched the Ousmane Sembene Award for best film in African Language.
âOutlaw Posseâ won the best diaspora narrative feature, âThe Wu Tang Clan Live at Red Rocks Amphitheatreâ clinched the best diaspora documentary while âThe Neighbourhood Alertâ won the best diaspora shot.
Earlier, Dr Raymond Anyiam-Osigwe, Chief Executive Officer of AMAA, appreciated the team that made the award ceremony a reality.
Anyiam-Osigwe specifically appreciated Lagos and Bayelsa states as well as international tourists from the U.S., for the love displayed toward AMAA.
He described AMAA as a special event that truly portrayed the story of Africa on the global stage.
âAMAA is not just celebrating the winners, but celebrating excellence and richness of our African history.
âAMAA in its second decade, a new chapter in the history book opens,â he said.