Download ~ Son of the Soil (2025) Review: A Fresh Voice in Nollywood
This movie is the kind of story that makes you sit back and think about what really matters. Son of the Soil tells the true life journey of a young man from a rural village who leaves everything behind to chase success in Lagos. You know that feeling when you watch something and it hits different? That’s what this film does. Within the first ten minutes, you already understand what’s driving this character, and you’re rooting for him completely. The opening scenes in the village are so real, so genuine, that you forget you’re watching a movie at all.
**The heart of Son of the Soil is the conflict nobody talks about**
What makes Son of the Soil stand out is that it doesn’t just celebrate the success story. It shows you the price. The main character has to betray his family’s traditions, ignore his father’s warnings, and almost lose his girlfriend in the process. There’s a scene halfway through where he’s sitting in his fancy Lagos apartment, and you can see the guilt eating him up from the inside. It’s uncomfortable to watch, but that’s exactly the point. Most Nollywood films would’ve just shown us him making it big and left it there. Son of the Soil asks the harder question: what did you lose to gain what you have?
The acting in Son of the Soil feels absolutely real
The lead actor carries this movie on his shoulders, and honestly, he doesn’t drop it once. His name is Chisom Okafor, and if you haven’t heard of him before, you will now. He moves through the film with this quiet desperation that feels honest. You believe him when he’s breaking down at his father’s bedside, and you believe him when he’s struggling in the corporate world. The supporting cast is solid too. His father’s character is played by a veteran, and every scene between them is gold. There’s no over-acting, no shouting scenes that feel forced. Everyone just feels like real people dealing with real problems.
Son of the Soil has some technical issues worth mentioning
Look, the movie isn’t perfect. The cinematography gets shaky in some scenes, and there’s a section in the middle that drags on for about fifteen minutes too long. Some of the dialogue feels slightly forced when characters are explaining things we already understand. The soundtrack also tries too hard at times to tell us how to feel instead of letting the moment breathe on its own.
Honest verdict on Son of the Soil
Son of the Soil is exactly what Nollywood needs right now. It’s thoughtful, it’s emotional without being melodramatic, and it treats its audience like adults who can handle nuance. Yes, it has flaws. Yes, the pacing stumbles. But the core story is powerful, and the execution is mostly solid. This is a movie that stays with you. You’ll think about it days later and want to call your parents.
I’m giving Son of the Soil a strong 8 out of 10. It’s not perfect, but it’s special, and that matters more.













