Lagos isn’t just a city; it’s a character. Loud, fast, unpredictable, and heavily layered, it exists in a permanent state of motion, where survival is a full-time job and even love feels like a hustle. From the crowded danfo buses to gated estates, roadside bukas and boardrooms buzzing with silent politics, there is so much to Lagos.

And the best Nollywood movies reflect this. They don’t just set their stories in Lagos; they let the city shape the story, dictate the energy and leave its fingerprints on every plot twist.

This list celebrates the Nollywood films that truly get Lagos: its people, pressures and pulse.

10. Confusion Na Wa (2013)

Running time: 1h 45m

Director: Kenneth Gyang

Genre: Comedy, Crime

In this biting dark comedy, a misplaced phone becomes the thread that weaves the lives of strangers together, in ways none of them can imagine. The story begins with two small-time hustlers, Charles (OC Ukeje) and Chichi (Gold Ikponmwosa), stealing a phone in traffic. What seems like a petty crime spirals into blackmail when they discover incriminating messages revealing an affair between a wealthy businessman, Emeka (Ramsey Nouah), and another man’s wife.

In this movie, Lagos is a city where any random Tuesday can explode into a disaster. Confusion Na Wa mirrors Lagos’ unpredictability, messy relationship pool, and dynamics.

Confusion Na Wa is streaming on Netflix but unavailable in Nigeria.

9. Kasala! (2018)

Running time: 1h 24m

Director: Ema Edosio

Genre: Comedy, Drama

This coming-of-age comedy captures the chaos and charm of youthful life in Lagos. When four teenage boys (Emeka Nwagbaraocha, Tomiwa Tegbe, Chimezie Imo, and Mike Folarin) take an uncle’s car for a joyride and accidentally wreck it, they’re thrown into a desperate scramble across town to fix the damage before he returns.

What follows is a fast-paced, tension-filled adventure through bustling neighbourhoods, brushes with street touts, and hilarious run-ins with shady mechanics. Kasala! thrives on its energy and humour, offering a vivid snapshot of Lagos street life and the unbreakable bonds of friendship. It’s gritty, funny, and full of that restless, scheming spirit that defines growing up in the city.

Kasala! is streaming on Netflix but unavailable in Nigeria.

8. The Ghost and the House of Truth (2019)

Running time: 1h 7m

Director: Akin Omotoso

Genre: Psychological Drama

This gripping psychological drama follows Bola Ogun (Susan Wokoma), a counsellor dedicated to helping ex-convicts reintegrate into society—until her own daughter (Darasimi Nadi) goes missing. What starts as a personal crisis quickly turns into a haunting descent into Lagos’s darker corners.

The film leads us through a city where police stations are cluttered with forgotten case files, mothers light candles and whisper prayers, and vigilante justice often feels more effective than the formal systems meant to protect. This isn’t the glossy, commercial Lagos; it’s the underbelly, the version of the city that lives in fear, pain, and quiet resilience. The Ghost and the House of Truth is a sobering portrait of institutional failure, yet it still manages to hold space for the possibility of healing and hope.

Watch Ghost and the House of Truth on Shomax.

7. Oga Bolaji (2018)

Running time: 1h 31m

Director: Kayode Kasum

Genre: Drama

Oga Bolaji follows the easygoing life of Bolaji (Gold Ikponmwosa), a washed-up, middle-aged musician coasting through life with cheap beer, small gigs, and few ambitions. But when he crosses paths with Ajua (Jasmine Fakunle), a young girl who shakes up his world, Bolaji is forced to reconsider what it means to be present, responsible, and alive.

This is not the Lagos of speed and spectacle. It’s the city seen through slow walks on dusty streets, banter at roadside joints, and the quiet poetry of ordinary people surviving the everyday. Oga Bolaji captures a Lagos rarely shown on screen—the one hiding between the noise. It’s a love letter to life on the margins, and to the quiet men who carry the city’s heartbeat without ever making a fuss.

Watch Oga Bolaji on MUBI.



6. Taxi Driver: Oko Ashewo (2015)

Running time: 1h 50m

Director: Daniel Oriahi

Genre: Comedy, Thriller

When Adigun (Femi Jacobs) moves to Lagos to take over his late father’s taxi business, he gets more than he bargained for—dragged into a wild underworld of sex workers, gangsters, and nocturnal hustlers. The film follows him through the city’s red-light districts, back-alley clubs, and shadowy police checkpoints, where the real Lagos comes out after dark.

This isn’t the Lagos of tourist brochures. It’s the chaotic, gritty city of unpaid bills, pepper soup joints, broken streetlights, and Agbero fights. Through Adigun’s wide-eyed confusion, we get a hilarious and unsettling glimpse into how Lagos—messy and maddening—still manages to function. It’s an ode to the beautiful disorder of the city at night.

Watch Taxi Driver: Oko Ashewo on YouTube.

5. 2 Weeks in Lagos (2019)

Running time: 1h 57m

Director: Kathryn Fasegha

Genre: Drama, Romance

When Ejikeme (Mawuli Gavor), an investment banker back from the US, falls for Lola (Beverly Naya), his best friend’s sister, love isn’t the only thing on the table—so are arranged marriages, business alliances, and unspoken cultural codes.

This film captures the Lagos of brunches in Victoria Island, boardroom negotiations in glass towers, and weddings where the aso-ebi alone could bankrupt you. But behind the glitz lies a web of tribal expectations, class divides, and family politics. Even among the elite, love in Lagos is never just about two people—it’s about status, legacy, and who your father knows.

Watch Two Weeks in Lagos on Netflix.

4. Gangs of Lagos (2023)

Running time: 2h 4m

Director: Jadesola Osiberu

Genre: Crime, Drama

Set in the gritty underbelly of Isale Eko, this crime thriller follows three childhood friends as they navigate the treacherous waters of gang life and political puppeteering. Gangs of Lagos doesn’t flinch—it dives headfirst into the brutal realities of inner-city survival: child recruits, blood-soaked loyalty, and the blurred lines between thuggery and governance.

From the chaotic alleys of Obalende to campaign rallies that double as battlegrounds, the film paints Lagos in shades of grit and gunfire. It’s a city where survival is not just a hustle—it’s a war. One week, politicians hand out bags of rice; the next, they orchestrate hits.

Yet beneath the violence lies a raw humanity: quiet moments of friendship, fragile dreams, and the kind of decisions no one should ever have to make. Gangs of Lagos shows us the Lagos that swallows innocence, rewards ruthlessness, and forges a special kind of resilience—the Lagos not found on postcards, but etched into the lives of too many.

Watch Gangs of Lagos on Prime Video.

3. Lagos Chairman (2022)

Running time: 2h 4m

Director: Jade Osiberu

Genre: Drama, Romance

Christmas in Lagos explores love, friendship, and self-discovery against a backdrop of opulence and Lagosian flair. The film follows Fiyin (Teniola Aladese), a young woman grappling with unrequited love for her best friend Elo (Shalom C. Obiago), who has returned from the U.S. to propose to his girlfriend, Yagazie (Angel Anosike). In her pursuit of Elo’s affection, Fiyin tests their friendship and the very foundation of Elo and Yagazie’s relationship. Meanwhile, a parallel romantic subplot unfolds as Toye (Wale Ojo) and Chief Dozie (Richard Mofe-Damijo) vie for Gbemi’s (Shaffy Bello) hand in marriage.

Christmas in Lagos engages deeply with themes of love, agency, and emotional authenticity. Jade Osiberu masterfully balances the fantasy with hard-hitting questions about human connections in a society obsessed with wealth and appearances.

Watch Christmas in Lagos on Prime Video.

2. A Lagos Love Story (2025)

Running time: 1h 44m

Director: Chinazam Onuzo

Genre: Romance

Promise Quest (Jemima Osunde) is a responsible young woman juggling three lives: a demanding events job, a chaotic home, and the emotional labour of shielding her teenage sister’s dreams. When she’s tasked with managing Afrobeats superstar King Kator (Mike Afolarin) for a major culture festival, their worlds collide in the most Lagos way possible.

As the story unfolds, the film captures something deeply familiar—how Lagos slowly wears everyone down. Between traffic that turns hours into whole lifetimes, last-minute clients, indifferent landlords, and borrowed wigs for that all-important “serious meeting,” A Lagos Love Story shows what modern love looks like when it’s filtered through Lagos stress.

It’s funny without being silly, romantic without the fairytale gloss, and intimately aware of how this city forces people to multitask heartbreak, hustle, and hope. This is not a love story in spite of Lagos, but because of it.

Watch A Lagos Love Story on Netflix.

1. Diary of a Lagos Girl (2016)

Running time: 

Director: Jumoke Olatunde

Genre: Romcom

This romcom follows Abimbola (Dolapo Oni), a single, materialistic Lagos woman on a quest for the ultimate man—rich, funny, God-fearing, stylish, influential, and of course, tall. Her search takes her through a minefield of Instagram posers, fake accent merchants, and matchmaking disasters that feel all too familiar to anyone who’s dated in Lagos.

Beneath the laughs is a sharp commentary on how Lagos society pressures women to have it all—be soft but assertive, sexy but not “too much,” ambitious yet still marriageable. Diary of a Lagos Girl pokes fun at these contradictions, blending glossy aesthetics with real talk about love, standards, and survival in the city’s unforgiving dating scene.

Watch Diary of A Lagos Girl on EbonylifeTV.


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