Acting
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Osita Iheme (born 1982) is a Nigerian actor. He is widely known for playing the role of 'Pawpaw' in the film Aki na Ukwa alongside Chinedu Ikedieze. In 2007 Osita received the Lifetime Achievement Award at the African Movie Academy Awards. He is considered to be one of Nigeria's most famous actors. Description above from the Wikipedia article Osita Iheme, licensed under CC-BY-SA, full list of contributors on Wikipedia.

Malachi turns up to his brother’s house from the village with his two sons in tow. He is not able to financially take care of them and wants his brother and his wife to put them through school. Will it be a successful mission? Are the children ready and willing to be better people in life?
A shy, reserved prince is ordered by his father the king to get married, however the two men do not see eye to eye on the qualities that a wife should possess.John Dumelo, Osita Iheme, Walter Anga (2012)

Nigeria's film industry, Nollywood, is the third-largest in the world--an unstoppable economic and cultural force that has taken the continent by storm and is now bursting beyond the borders of Africa. "Nollywood Babylon" is a feature documentary detailing the industry's phenomenal success. Propelled by a booming 1970s soundtrack of African underground music, the movie presents an electric vision of a modern African metropolis and a revealing look at the powerhouse that is Nigerian cinema.
Chinedu plays a young pharmacy graduate (Gabriel) who returns to his home village to meet up with his beloved Sandra. This girl is nearly twice his height and her parents think she is mad to be with him. Things move on for Gabriel when his rival Desmond returns from a prolonged trip to the United States (touting a bandana and gangster shades). (Pierre Barrot)

Dada, a mischievously sadistic six-year old, constantly bothers his neighbors with stealing and pranks. Dada's mother is at her wits end when her brother visiting from Lagos offers to take Dada to the big city to teach him some discipline. Once there, his uncle begs him to behave. And, of course, he doesn't: pretending to be a prophet, Dada scams a woman out of a television and demands that another take off her clothes in order to perform an exorcism. After being reprimanded by the police, Dada attempts to avoid work by stealing his uncle's money and giving it to some "businessmen" on the street. When he returns to collect his profit, he finds out that he has been tricked. He then decides to pursue riches by forming the "Baby Police Force of Nigeria" (which is actually comprised entirely of adults except for Dada), and earns money by taking money from "criminals" (who are actually just everyday people).

Two young troublesome brothers cause disruption in home life, terrorise the people in their village and wreak havoc at school.
An illiterate village boy, who has been taken advantage of, heads to the city to study law. He returns with grandiose vocabulary and a mission to belittle those who had previously made him feel demeaned.
An illiterate village boy, who has been taken advantage of, heads to the city to study law. He returns with grandiose vocabulary and a mission to belittle those who had previously made him feel demeaned.
Aki and Popo's antics get them banished from their father's house. They go to live with their uncle and begin terrorizing another village.
Two greedy brothers defraud their brother who is living abroad by taking the money that he sends to build a house, and lining their own pockets. Now their brother returns to Nigeria and is demanding answers. [parts 1-2]