The Phone Is the New Film School
A few years ago, making a film in Africa meant renting a camera, hiring a crew, and pleading for funding. Today, all some creators need is a phone, a tripod, and an editing app. Whether it’s a TikTok thriller or a short film shot in portrait mode, mobile filmmaking is booming across the continent.
The numbers prove why this shift matters. Nigeria’s film industry now generates over US$6.4 billion annually, and produces over 2500 films thereby employing more than one million people, according to Businessday. But more important than the volume is the new energy driving it. It is younger, scrappier, and far more tech-literate.
Gatekeepers are out, creators are in
Traditional Nollywood has always been prolific. But Gen Z creators aren’t waiting for the system to catch up. They’re building their own with tools they already own. TikTok, YouTube, and Instagram have become launchpads for micro-films and storytelling experiments. What used to be skits are now full narratives, complete with transitions, scripts, colour grading, and original scores.
These filmmakers use phones with cinematic modes like the iPhone 15 or Infinix Zero 30. They edit with apps like CapCut, VN, LumaFusion, and DaVinci Resolve Mobile. For sound, tools like Descript and Cleanvoice help with voiceovers, while RunwayML or mobile green screen kits add visual effects.
No film school. No permit. Just pure experimentation.
“How a zero budget short film, shot on an iPhone ended up on Tv,” the creator of crown short film shared on TikTok.
The stories are getting global attention
Recognition is following the effort. The African Smartphone International Film Festival (ASIFF), based in Nigeria, exists solely to spotlight films shot on phones, tablets, or webcams. The entries are often raw but never lacking in creativity. Past selections have tackled everything from family conflict to sci-fi thrillers, all made with handheld devices and backyard sets.
In South Africa, Moghelingz went from filming comedy skits on a phone to starring in a Netflix short, ROSA: Republic of South Ah Sht. In Nigeria, Director K started out using an iPhone before directing music videos for Burna Boy and Davido. These are not outliers. They’re proof that the ladder works.
TikTok and YouTube have raised the bar
African creators are pushing the limits of short-form content. On TikTok, clips like Scariest Short Film Shot on iPhone and Capturing the Beauty of Africa in Miniature are clocking millions of views. But it’s not just about numbers. The scripting is tighter. The editing is cleaner. The lighting is intentional.
Platforms may be free, but the output feels cinematic.
Power outages, limited gear, and data costs are still challenges. Many creators record in closets to muffle sound or use torchlights for soft lighting. Others send scripts across WhatsApp groups and sync audio manually. These aren’t setbacks. They’re the backdrop to a continent figuring it out.
Africa doesn’t need permission to tell its stories. And today’s stories aren’t waiting for million-naira budgets or studio greenlights. They’re being shot on phones, edited in free apps, and shared with the world.
With platforms like ASIFF and GenZ creators showing what’s possible, one thing is clear. The next blockbuster may not come from a studio. It might come from a smartphone.