December in Nigeria has a smell. It’s roasted corn, perfume overspray, traffic fumes, and hope. It’s the month when everyone suddenly believes in joy again—and Nollywood, like your favorite overachieving friend, always shows up dressed for the occasion.
This year? Nollywood didn’t just show up. It arrived early, stayed late, and ordered dessert.
From high-stakes political drama to chaotic family comedies, Nollywood movies December 2025 are stacked like a Christmas buffet you pretend you’ll “just sample.” Spoiler: you’re going back for seconds.
Whether you’re a cinema loyalist, a Netflix night owl, or someone who watches trailers “just to see,” this is your December movie watchlist Nigeria edition—curated, opinionated, and very watch-worthy. For more updates like this, keep an eye on our full entertainment news coverage.
Let’s get into the films that will own your holidays.
This Is Not a Nollywood Movie
Release date: December 5, 2025
First of all, the title alone is doing stand-up comedy.
This Is Not a Nollywood Movie is that friend who looks you dead in the eye and says, “Relax, it’s not that deep,” then proceeds to unpack everything. The film follows Okechukwu, a once-promising Igbo-language director whose career has seen better days—think peak-to-valley Nollywood heartbreak.
Just when he thinks a comeback is loading, he gets kidnapped mid-production. Yes. Kidnapped. Suddenly, what should have been a normal film shoot turns into chaos with subtitles.
Written and directed by Wale Ojo, the movie mixes satire, action, and laugh-out-loud moments like a remix you didn’t know you needed. It pokes fun at Nollywood stereotypes while still showing love to the industry.
With Bimbo Akintola, Julius Agwu, and Hanks Anuku bringing nostalgia and punch, this one feels like insider gossip turned into a movie. It’s smart, chaotic, and perfect if you enjoy films that break the fourth wall and then dance on it.
Why watch?
Because it’s one of those latest Nollywood movies that feels fresh without trying too hard.
King of Boys 3
Release date: December 25, 2025
Let’s be serious for a second.
If December were a throne, King of Boys 3 would be sitting on it, legs crossed, daring anyone to question her authority.
The King of Boys 3 release date lands on Christmas Day, which is honestly poetic. While some people unwrap gifts, others will unwrap betrayal, power plays, and political drama.
This final chapter in the King of Boys sequel saga brings us back to Eniola Salami—still dangerous, still strategic, still unforgettable. The story digs deeper into what power costs when you’ve already paid with blood, loyalty, and your peace of mind.
Sola Sobowale returns as Alhaja Eniola Salami, and the King of Boys 3 cast is expected to include familiar faces that fans have been side-eyeing in trailers and teasers. Think enemies resurfacing, alliances cracking, and one-liners that will live on social media forever.
This is Nollywood political drama at its best—sharp, stylish, and emotionally loaded. If you love movies like King of Boys, or you’re constantly asking what to watch after King of Boys, this is your answer.
To understand the legacy behind films like this, it helps to look at voices from a true Nollywood icon—the women who paved the way for power stories like this.
Why watch?
Because this is one of the best Nollywood dramas 2025, full stop.
Behind the Scenes
Release date: December (TBA)
Funke Akindele doesn’t do “soft launches.” She does December domination.
With Behind the Scenes, she switches the camera around and focuses on the people we rarely see—the crew. The runners. The dreamers. The ones holding things together while the spotlight shines elsewhere.
This comedy-drama blends laughter with quiet emotional moments, like that one friend who cracks jokes but still checks on you at 2 a.m.
The cast list reads like a Nollywood family reunion: Tobi Bakre, Iyabo Ojo, Mr. Macaroni, Destiny Etiko, Ini Dima Okoji, and many more. It’s stacked, and the curiosity is real.
If you want a deeper look into her creative process, here’s more on Funke Akindele and why December seems to belong to her.
Why watch?
Because Funke Akindele movies understand both comedy and chaos—especially the kind that feels real.
Colours of Fire
Release date: December 24, 2025
This one is for the lovers of epic drama and forbidden romance.
Directed by Niyi Akinmolayan, Colours of Fire feels like folklore dipped in cinema gloss. A warrior from one clan. A woman from another. Love caught in the middle like a secret letter.
With Uzor Arukwe, Mercy Aigbe, Osas Ighodaro, and Gabriel Afolayan, the film leans into emotion, visuals, and storytelling that feels both old and new.
Early teasers have already created serious industry buzz, proving once again how social media fuels anticipation for trending Nollywood movies.
Why watch?
Because it delivers drama the way Nollywood knows best—loud, beautiful, and unforgettable.
A Very Dirty Christmas
Release date: December 16, 2025
Family Christmases are rarely peaceful. Nollywood finally said it out loud.
This comedy turns a family reunion into a full-blown circus of secrets, shouting matches, and awkward laughter. Think of it as your WhatsApp family group chat—on the big screen.
With Ini Edo, Nancy Isime, IK Ogbonna, Lateef Adedimeji, and Wumi Toriola, this is one of those holiday Nollywood movies that feels painfully relatable.
Why watch?
Because chaos is tradition.
Oversabi Aunty
Release date: December 19, 2025
Every family has one. This film gives her a microphone.
Toyin Abraham stars as a meddling aunt whose interference turns a multicultural wedding into organized confusion. The comedy is warm, silly, and grounded in familiar family drama.
If you enjoy female-led Nollywood movies with heart, this one’s for you.
Why December Matters
Nollywood closed 2024 with over ₦2.8 billion in December box office revenue. Films like Everybody Loves Jenifa proved that Nigerians show up when the story hits home.
With cinemas buzzing and new Nigerian movies on Netflix also expanding reach—check out how streaming shapes Netflix releases—December has become Nollywood’s Super Bowl.
Final Take
This year’s Nollywood movie roundup isn’t just content—it’s culture. These are must-watch Nollywood movies that reflect power, love, chaos, ambition, and humor, all wrapped in December sparkle.
So whether you’re chasing Nollywood blockbusters, searching for Nigerian holiday movies, or just need something good to watch after rice and chicken, this list has you covered.
Lights down. Popcorn ready. Nollywood has the floor 🎬