Parents' Guide to

Iwájú

By Ashley Moulton, Common Sense Media Reviewer

age 8+

Africanfuturist adventure has some scares and violence.

Iwájú TV poster: Tola and Kole, two Nigerian kids, stand with the lizard Otin

A Lot or a Little?

What you will—and won't—find in this TV show.

Community Reviews

age 8+

Based on 2 parent reviews

age 10+

Must see!

This was great! 🎊🎉 Even as an adult, I found it highly entertaining. Both parents and children can enjoy this together whether you are familiar with Nigerian culture or not. I appreciated how each episode allowed the main characters’ background to unravel. They didn’t just give it to us all at once. 👍This series ended much too soon!!! We must have more… Movie maybe?
age 6+

Iwaju a fantastic new mini-series

Iwaju is a wonderful animated series kids and parents can enjoy. Disney did something incredibly different and reached out to Nigerian creatives. The Nigerian creators and cultural consultants made sure the characters were based on and represented a culture that exists... and it works very well. So congrats to Disney for working with Nigerians to bring cultural authenticity. Iwaju feels more real, grounded on real issues like friendships, parental hardships and poverty. Parents struggle with money, overwork, neglect and moral values. These are good themes to help kids cope with their own understanding of how the world works. Concerned parents will be happy to know Iwaju is finally a woke-free animation for kids to watch. Everyone knows Disney has been caught up with the 'Go Woke, go Broke' thing. Iwaju has no sexualizing themes or gender politics. In Iwaju a kid works hard to earn money to save his sick mother and wants to become a doctor to save her and have a better life. He struggles with powerful adults influencing him to do bad things, but ultimately he chooses to do the right thing. Now that's the type of strong characters Disney executives/creatives should do more. Overall Iwaju is a great family fun animated TV mini-series filled with interesting character arcs, engaging storylines and fantastic animation and production design. Some of the adults/villains can be a bit scary but not too much. Hopefully, we will see more of Iwaju, it's Nigerian creatives and Disney's bold new partnerships.

Is It Any Good?

Our review:
Parents say (2 ):
Kids say (1 ):

Iwájú seems like a rough draft with a lot of potential. It's a co-production between Disney and African creators, and the futuristic Lagos story-world they've created is delightful. However, the characters are somewhat one-note and don't change much over time. Some plot details are a bit hard to follow over the 6 episodes, while others are cliche and predictable. Kid viewers will likely enjoy the series but not fall in love with it (and the kidnapping theme may be entirely too much for some).

On the plus side, the story brings a fresh perspective to many American viewers. For many kids growing up in the U.S., Iwájú may be their first pop culture exposure to life in a modern African city and to Nigerian culture. Iwájú is a sharp cultural critique on the inequality and class divisions in modern-day Lagos. It's hard to think of an American-produced kids' series that places such a magnifying glass on our own racial and class realities. Iwájú has many sparks of good ideas, but falls a bit flat in execution.

TV Details

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