Sacrifice

Pushed past her limit, a young dancer becomes consumed by the spirit of the goddess she portrays. A short film written and directed by Mrinalini Basu. Produced by Yemi Adegbulu. In production Spring 2026.

Mother Me

A woman must return to her childhood home to restore its broken pieces. In doing so, she is confronted with the ghosts of her past self, who take her on a cathartic journey into the future. Directed by Amit Kaur. Written by Amanda Ajomale. Produced by Yemi Adegbulu. In production early 2026. 

Arlo’s Last Day

On the cusp of ageing out of her beloved after-school ballet class and financial worries clouding her future, Arlo struggles to say goodbye to her last symbol of childhood. Written and Directed by Chioma Ejimofo. Produced by Yemi Adegbulu. The film is supported by the Wiggan Award, which was awarded to Chioma and Yemi’s last short film collaboration, Goodbye Train.

Leeside Arts Commission: Camel Estuary

Leeside is a creative collaboration between Natural England and Arts and Culture, University of Exeter. For Leeside, filmmakers Xenia Glen and Antosh Wojcik are exploring the Camel Estuary’s cultural and environmental heritage through community centred filmmaking highlighting both traditional and modern conservation efforts whilst also illustrating local community’s evolving relationship with the estuary. Press release.

Aso

Kemi, a defiant Nigerian tomboy, disappoints her mother by wearing men’s traditional Nigerian clothing, their clash in beliefs becomes a statement of transcending societal judgement. A short film written and directed by Yemi Adegbulu. Produced by Xenia Glen - Sleepwalker and Helium Media.

Carabao

‘A rebellious Filipino carnival worker is rendered powerless after a life-threatening seizure reveals his undocumented status in the UK.’ A feature film that follows a day-in-the-life of the lead character from the short film ‘Alo’. Supported by the BFI NETWORK’s Early Development Fund. Writer/director Xenia Glen. Co-writer Antosh Wojcik. Producer Dominic Buchanan - Home Team.

How to Keep Time

This whimsical, surreal narrative follows a young man’s attempts to retrieve the memories and dreams of his Polish grandfather who is struggling through the final stages of vascular dementia. A feature adaptation of the Arts Council England funded theatre piece, ‘How To Keep Time: A Drum Solo For Dementia’, written by Antosh Wojcik.