Film Lab Africa 2 Signals a Shift in How Nigeria Builds Its Film and TV Talent
TheBritish Council has launched the second cohort of its Film Lab Africa programme, aimed at young Nigerian writers, directors, and producers between 18 and 35.
Delivered in partnership with EbonyLife Creative Academy and Iconic Steps (UK), the programme arrives at a time when Nigeria's creative industry is under increasing pressure to produce more structured, globally competitive content for both cinema and streaming platforms.
Nigeria’s film scene is busy, energetic, and constantly producing but what is less visible is how many creators still move from idea to production without any real development system in between.
Scripts are often written fast, produced faster, and shaped more by instinct than by process.
This programme aims to bridge that gap.
Shift Toward Episodic Storytelling as Industry Demand Grows
In this new phase, attention is moving away from standalone films and the focus is now on episodic storytelling, the kind used in series, streaming platforms, and long-running character arcs.
That matters because it changes how writers think.
A short film can survive on a single idea but a series cannot because it needs structure, patience, and the ability to stretch a story without breaking it.
So the programme introduces a writers’ lab built around that reality.
Training is split between online sessions, mentorship, and residency work. But the more interesting part is not where learning happens. It is how writers are being pushed to think differently, less “ending a story quickly,” more “building something that continues.”
When Training Stops Being Theory and Starts Becoming Production
Selected participants receive funding to produce pilot projects from their scripts. That is where the tone of the programme changes completely.
Mentors from Nigeria and the UK guide participants through that process, not by lecturing, but by working through decisions with them, what stays, what changes, what actually works on screen.
By the end, there is a showcase where projects are presented to people who matter in the industry, investors, distributors, and collaborators.
Why the Timing Matters for Nigeria's Creative Industry
The launch of Film Lab Africa 2 comes at a critical moment for Nigeria's entertainment sector.
WhileNollywood remains one of the world's most productive film industries, producing roughly 2,500 films per year and ranking second globally by output behind Bollywood, there continues to be a structural gap in formal training for writers and long-form content creators.
On the other hand, global platforms are now paying closer attention to structure, how stories are written, how they hold together and how they sustain attention beyond a single viewing.
Film Lab Africa 2 steps into that space, not to fix it completely, but to work inside it.
For young creators, that changes the game slightly, talent is no longer the only entry point but structure is becoming part of the expectation.
This is where opportunity and pressure meet.
Access, Geography, and Who Gets In
The programme is open across all 36 states in Nigeria. Training runs online with regional access points.
That matters because entry into the film industry is still uneven. Location often decides who gets exposure and who does not.
There is also inclusion for persons with disabilities, widening access to people who are often excluded from creative pipelines.
The UK partnership adds another layer. It exposes participants to production systems outside Nigeria and places their work in a wider reference frame.
That does not replace local storytelling. It forces comparison. And comparison usually exposes what is missing.
What Film Lab Africa 2 Actually Represents
Film Lab Africa 2 is not trying to reinvent Nigerian filmmaking.
It is simply exposing something that has been there for a while, the industry has talent, but it is still building the systems that help that talent travel beyond instinct and into structure.
What happens next will not be defined by the launch itself.
It will be defined by whether the people inside it leave with something more difficult to measure, not just skills, but a different way of thinking about how stories are built, shaped, and carried forward.
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