Gunna may soon be the subject of a Netflix documentary, if a recently surfaced billboard is any indication. The advertisement, shared widely on social media, promotes a project titled The Last Wun and describes the Atlanta rapper as “The one they counted out.” Gunna has not confirmed the campaign, and Netflix has not issued a public statement. Still, the image was enough to reignite conversation about where his career stands now.
The rumored film appears to take its name from The Last Wun, his sixth studio album, released in August as his final project under YSL Records. That record, which included collaborations with Offset, Burna Boy, Wizkid, Nechie, and Asake, arrived during a period of intense scrutiny surrounding the YSL RICO case. It was a moment that marked both an ending and a recalibration. A documentary bearing the same title would suggest a closer look at that transition.
Talk of a film project has circulated before. Last fall, reports indicated that Gunna held a private screening in New York City for a documentary, though few details emerged at the time. The possibility of a broader release has now prompted renewed interest from fans, some of whom see the project as an opportunity for clarity. Online reactions ranged from celebratory to curious, with one user writing, “Finally. He’s making deals for fun now. He’s for that bag fr,” and another adding, “It’s about damn time, I’ve been waiting for this!!!!!”
Fractures, Forgiveness and a Future in Question
Others speculated about whether the film might address lingering allegations that have shadowed the rapper since his plea deal. “NO WAYYYYY he clearing up the snitch allegations,” one post read. Gunna has largely avoided public back-and-forth on the matter, choosing instead to let his music speak. A documentary format could offer a more deliberate account, should he decide to confront those narratives directly.
The timing is notable given the unresolved tension between Gunna and Young Thug, once close collaborators. In a September appearance on the Its Up There podcast, Young Thug spoke candidly about the strain. “It ain’t even about not f*cking with you because I want him to just understand why I feel like it shouldn’t happen again because I’m not gonna be able to look at you the same no matter what,” he said. “We can get a trillion dollars together, I’m still not gonna be able to look at you the way I looked at you before we went to jail. We love each other, we’re just going our own ways. Sometimes you do that.”
Other artists have publicly encouraged reconciliation. In a post on X, 21 Savage urged the two to repair their relationship, writing, “Yall ns fix that sht yall love each other na you knew gunna wasn’t no gangster when he told the first time and we swept it under the rug for you you know he wasn’t tryna leave you to hang na fck the streets we ain’t get sht but trauma from that sht.” Whether The Last Wun ultimately becomes a vehicle for reflection, explanation, or simple documentation of a turbulent period, it arrives at a moment when Gunna’s story feels unfinished—and closely watched.


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