In 22 minutes, Lola Okusami delivered a great short film that made me so angry I nearly cried. I loved every minute of it. Gone Nine Months chronicles the soon
11 months ago, Lanaire Aderemi performed for the first time ever in Lagos. Today she is a highly requested spoken word artist and a published poet. We got in contact
Film director Imoh Umoren has released the trailer for his fourth film, Children of Mud; and it looks amazing. Weaving in the realities of many children in Nigeria today, Umoren
Feyisayo Anjorin believes a good story is about binaries, and like most, ensures his points of view show in his work as shown by Crooked Road, a 2011 neo-noir production
‘In the sublime, can you hear my heart cry?’ Writer, photographer and filmmaker, Ajay Abalaka chronicles life in a utopia in The Sublime which she views as a continuation of
Iyanya juxtaposes artificial intelligence and its place in human relationships in his new video for Hold On. Set in 2023, it features Chenade Laroy as Mimi, struggling to understand her
The trailer for Banana Island Ghost is out and it is both intriguing and engaging as it is confusing. From the creators of Before 30, the movie sees Chioma ‘Chigul’
Written and directed by Damilare Sonoiki, a Black-ish writer; African Time deals with an African, specifically Nigerian, experience of life in America as immigrants. The first episode is on YouTube but
Codename 1.0 is a short action film of sound quality and production by 18 year old Nigerian filmmaker, Nicolas Oduniwe. I spoke to Nicolas, commonly known as Kuddi recently about
A few months ago, an unfunny comedian made a short skit on rape , deeming it justifiable (by his standards). Diji Aderogba’s short film, Victim, does the opposite by delving into
Nick Knight, founder of Showstudio says garments are meant to be seen in motion. Fashion films then, are one of the best ways to depict that, as seen in 19
Fisayo Osilaja recently released her debut short film Rouge, documenting love, heartbreak and the emotions leading up to self-discovery. The six and a half minute long production channels a narrative
Not many Nigerian movies tackle uncommon and real scenarios, we are lucky Bariga Sugar is one of those movies setting themselves apart. Set in a brothel in the slums of Lagos,
Comedian (a term I use very loosely), ‘Baba de Baba’s’ Rape Nonsense  video states: ‘If you cannot sleep with a man, don’t go to his house.’ This serves as his