There are filmmakers. And then there are industry builders.
In an era where Nollywood is brimming with potential yet stifled by systemic limitations-piracy, underfunding, poor distribution, lack of legal literacy—one name stands out not just for making films but for building platforms, systems, and solutions: Niyi Akinmolayan, founder of Anthill Studios.
While most of the limelight in Nollywood goes to award-winning actors or box office numbers, the real game-changers are those reimagining what the industry could look like. And Niyi has consistently proven to be that person. Not just for Nigeria, but for Africa, and—through his innovations—for the global creative space.

One App at a Time: Casting Beyond Lagos
A few weeks ago, Akinmolayan announced the beta launch of OneTake App, a solution-driven platform built to democratise Nollywood’s casting process. Tired of hearing, “You must be in Lagos to get a role”? This app says otherwise. OneTake allows actors from across Nigeria—and even beyond—to submit auditions and monologues, making talent access truly national and even borderless.

While still in beta, the app is already being tested by the public, with aspiring actors submitting monologues from states far from the Lagos bubble. That alone is a revolution. And not just a Nigerian one. It has global implications.
Because let’s face it: how many undiscovered Genevieves, Chimezies, or Omotolas have been trapped in towns with no casting director? OneTake fixes that gap.
NollywoodFilmmaker.com: The Ark We Needed
But OneTake is just one part of Akinmolayan’s vision.
Earlier this year, he launched NollywoodFilmmaker.com, a digital ark built for creatives across the filmmaking chain—directors, screenwriters, editors, marketers, VFX artists, even IP lawyers.
This isn’t just a platform; it’s a philosophy. “Stop losing partnerships due to lack of technical know-how,” he said at the launch. “Let professionals do the parts of your film you can’t handle. Put square pegs in square holes.”
This platform bridges competence and connection, offering a verified network for investors, producers, and crew. For an industry often built on handshake deals and last-minute chaos, this is not just innovation, it’s salvation.
A Trust Network, Not a Cabal
What makes this model so powerful is its accountability. Anthill Studios is not just recommending these professionals—they’re vouching for them. This puts their name, brand, and reputation on the line.
And that’s what the industry needs: trust that has proof, not just promise.
Veteran filmmaker Biodun Stephen called it a “trust network” designed to restore confidence, especially for burned-out investors. “This isn’t a cabal,” she said, “it’s a system built on competence.”

Where Lawyers Finally Walk in Before the Damage
The platform goes further by addressing a long-ignored aspect of filmmaking: legal protection.
With vetted IP lawyers available through the platform, creatives can draft contracts before production, not after drama. “People only call lawyers when things go bad,” said screenwriter and lawyer Rita Onwurah. “This app closes that gap.”
This is a huge step toward IP awareness, rate standardisation, and legal literacy—the kind of change Nollywood desperately needs but often overlooks.
This Isn’t Just Tech. It’s Culture Re-engineering.
What Niyi Akinmolayan is doing isn’t just innovation—it’s culture re-engineering. Nollywood has always been about hustle. Now, it must be about structure.
And this structure isn’t built on fancy offices or foreign investment alone, it’s built on apps like NollywoodFilmmaker.com, which say, “We’re done winging it. Let’s professionalise.”
Even VFX Training for Kids? Yes, Please
And as if this wasn’t enough, just today, Anthill Studios announced a VFX, AI, and Animation summer training for children. Yes—children.
While most production companies are gearing up for their next cinema project, Anthill is seeding the future by helping young Nigerians unleash their creative potential early. From storytelling to effects, this training is planting dreams in the next generation, long before they pick a course in university.
It is easy to make a good film. What’s hard is to build a sustainable film industry. Niyi is doing both.
Why Aren’t We Celebrating This?
We have awards for best actor, best supporting actress, and best editing. But how about awards for best innovator? How about African Filmmaker of the Year, not for a movie but for a mindset?
In an industry where most people are focused on the next premiere, Akinmolayan is focused on the next 10 years.
And that’s why he deserves not just our applause—but our recognition.