Nigerian director and cinematographer Daniel Omogunloye says his upcoming film Canaan is ultimately a story about identity, belonging, and the emotional toll of not being fully seen by the people around us.
Speaking with The Nollywood Reporter, Omogunloye describes the film as following a young man struggling to exist in a world that continually tells him he should not. While Canaan touches on mental illness, family pressure, and love, he says its central concern is the cost of being misunderstood.
The story also carries personal significance for the filmmaker, who says many people can identify with the character’s experience of feeling caught between who they are and who others expect them to be.
“At some point, trapped between who we are and who the people we love need us to be. I’ve watched people I care about shrink under the weight of expectation, and that pain never left me,” he says.
Beyond its personal roots, Omogunloye says the project reflects his desire to tell stories that help people feel less isolated in their struggles.

As a filmmaker, he describes one of the greatest challenges of directing Canaan as preserving the emotional truth of the story without allowing it to become melodramatic. Given the film’s focus on mental illness, grief, and fractured family relationships, he says the creative team had to resist the temptation to overstate emotions.
“I had to keep reminding myself and the cast to stay quiet. To let the silences do the work,” he says. “I navigated it by going back to the script constantly and asking questions. Once we anchored in that, the performances found their own truth.”
Omogunloye also speaks highly of working with veteran actor Mike Ezuruonye, describing the experience as one of the highlights of the production.
According to him, Ezuruonye arrived fully prepared and brought a level of honesty and commitment that elevated the performance beyond expectations.

“That kind of commitment is contagious,” he says. “It elevates everyone around him and reminds you exactly why you fell in love with storytelling in the first place.”
Ultimately, Omogunloye hopes audiences leave the film with a greater understanding of people living with mental illness and a willingness to approach them with empathy rather than fear.
For him, Canaan is not defined by a diagnosis but by the humanity of its central character.
“I want audiences to see the people in their own lives who might be struggling and choose curiosity over fear. Choose presence over distance,” he says. “And for anyone watching who sees themselves in Canaan, I want them to feel seen.”