
Audio By Carbonatix
The Africa Film Finance Forum (AFFF) returns with renewed urgency and clarity of purpose, committed to unlocking the full economic potential of Africa’s film industry.
Scheduled to take place from September 16–18, 2025, in Lagos, Nigeria, AFFF is shaping the roadmap for a $20 billion Pan-African film economy, rooted in storytelling, powered by finance, and scaled through industry.
With the theme “Pan-African Film Economy: Building a $20B Industry for 1.4 Billion People”, the forum brings together a cross-section of industry stakeholders, filmmakers, investors, policymakers, financiers, distributors, and tech innovators to design the systems that will transform creativity into structured capital growth.
“Storytelling began in Africa. Our myths, oral histories, and traditions have always been foundational,” said Mary Ephraim-Egbas, Convener of AFFF.
“But to compete globally, Africa must move beyond telling stories to monetising them by industrialising the film sector and positioning African content as both heritage and high-value export.”
For decades, African stories have shaped culture, inspired movements, and connected communities. Yet, the continent’s film economy remains largely informal and undercapitalised.
AFFF is changing that narrative by building pipelines that link creative talent to financial tools, policies, and platforms.
Key features of AFFF 2025 include:
Investor’s Room & Deal Table: Curated spaces for pre-qualified film projects to meet financiers and pitch for funding.
Certified Finance Training for Banks & Investors: Equipping financial institutions to understand film as a viable asset class.
Policy Roundtables: Engaging government leaders on aligning film with national development strategies and GDP growth.
CINETOUR: A campaign spotlighting Africa’s diverse film locations as engines for tourism and investment.
FilmTech Track: Showcasing innovations driving efficiency, transparency, and scale in production and distribution.
“Unlocking a $20B industry starts with recognising film as infrastructure—creative, economic, and strategic,” said Bolaji Abimbola, Co-Chair of the AFFF PR and Strategic Communications Committee.
“AFFF isn’t just about films; it’s about jobs, exports, digital platforms, and policy shifts that make growth inevitable.”
“This is Africa’s creative century,” added Clarina De Freitas, fellow Co-Chair.
“Our stories are our leverage, but only when matched with financing, distribution, and institutional credibility.”
From informal markets to cinema screens, and mobile streaming to cross-border co-productions, AFFF is focused on building a Pan-African film ecosystem—not one led by extractive interests, but by Africans who understand the value of their narratives and the necessity of owning their industries.
Latest Stories
-
We can tackle multiple priorities – Sam George defends Anti-LGBTQ Bill push
6 minutes -
Statement: Ghana Chamber of Mines’ Response to Claims in Joe Jackson’s “Ananse Stories about the Economy of Ghana”
7 minutes -
GES opens 2026 teacher recruitment for licensed B.Ed graduates
9 minutes -
Ghana must value skilled trades, build resilient learners — Ibn Chambas
17 minutes -
Ghana must rethink education around relevance, resilience and responsibility — Ibn Chambas
20 minutes -
Prince Harry faces defamation lawsuit from charity he co-founded
22 minutes -
South Korea deploys thermal cameras to track escaped zoo wolf
24 minutes -
Calls for royal meeting with Epstein survivors grow ahead of US visit
27 minutes -
Ibn Chambas advocates blend of technology and human values in education
29 minutes -
UMA improves healthcare access in Asutifi North with GH₵700k ‘Kim Taylor Legacy’ Walkway
34 minutes -
Scholarships Authority and Fanaka University offer sponsorship for procurement and supply chain studies
37 minutes -
Bisa Kdei drops new single ‘Go N Look’ featuring Medikal
43 minutes -
Benin facing rising terrorism in north as French military presence faces growing criticism
44 minutes -
UEW Public Lecture Series 2026: Education debate ‘about the soul of Ghana’s future’ — Dr Ibn Chambas
45 minutes -
EU fingerprint and photo travel rules come into force from today
1 hour