Milk and Mirrors wins Best Short Film at London festival

Milk and Mirrors wins Best Short Film at London festival

A short film exploring postpartum identity and motherhood has clinched top honours at one of the United Kingdom’s prominent independent cinema showcases, with Milk and Mirrors winning Best Short Film at the London Indie Film Festival.

The win marks a significant milestone for its director, Ekelemchukwu Nnaji, popularly known as Martinz Nnaji Jr., a Nigerian-born filmmaker based in the UK, whose work has drawn attention for its disciplined visual style and unflinching exploration of internal emotional conflict.

“This recognition means a great deal to me. The film was created with a quiet intentionality, allowing performance, silence and image to carry the story. To see it resonate at LIFF reinforces my belief in short films as powerful, complete works, and in the universality of deeply human stories,” he said.

Written and produced by Kemi Kentebe, the film centres on Maya, a young mother navigating the fragile months after childbirth. Confronted with postpartum turmoil, a fractured sense of identity and a sudden professional setback, she must find her way back to herself — both as a mother and as a woman.

Rather than explicitly spelling out her anguish, the film relies on silence, restraint and nuanced performances to build an intimate portrait that lingers long after its final frame.

Nnaji has worked across Nigeria and the UK, and the LIFF recognition adds to a growing list of African-born filmmakers gaining ground at major international festivals. Milk and Mirrors is his latest short film.

Culled from punch