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AFRIFF 2025 unveils first-ever landmark Workshop on Artificial Intelligence, Cinema & Culture with Toyosi  Akerele-Ogunsiji’s Rise Interactive Studios

Africa International Film Festival (AFRIFF), the continent’s premier annual celebration of film, storytelling and creative  excellence in collaboration with Rise Interactive Studios, proudly announces a groundbreaking full-day AI Workshop  and Cultural Dialogue titled “HUMACHINES MAKING FILMS: Africa’s Cinematic Future, Culture & Artificial  Intelligence”, which is a first of its kind focus on AI in the festival’s 14years of existence. Africa’s creative economy is one  of the continent’s fastest-growing sectors, yet its engagement with AI remains limited. This definitive session, which is  to be held on Tuesday, 4th November 2025, from 10am to 5pm at Twin Waters, Lekki, Lagos, Nigeria will explore how  AI can democratize filmmaking, empower young creators and position Africa as not just as a consumer of global tech  but as a co-creator of the world’s next potentially cinematic language. 

Headlined by Toyosi Akerele-Ogunsiji, Founder and CEO of Rise Interactive Studios and Co-Writer, Producer and  Executive Producer of Makemation, Africa’s first feature film on Artificial Intelligence, this workshop will explore the  power of Artificial Intelligence as a creative partner, not a competitor, in the future of African cinema. Building on the  widespread acclaim and global praise surrounding MAKEMATION, which was recently shown at the Microsoft  Research Centre on the sidelines of the 80th United Nations General Assembly in New York in September, the theme,  Humachines Making Films will extend the conversation by unpacking how machines are reshaping creative expression, redefining cinematic authorship and demystify how AI is transforming film production from script writing, directing,  virtual cinematography to automated editing, visual effects, dubbing and distribution while also unpacking urgent  questions around intellectual property, creative ethics, cultural authenticity and the possibilities for African filmmakers  to assert cultural sovereignty in the digital age. 

“The success of MAKEMATION revealed that Africa is not just a consumer of Artificial Intelligence, we can also be creators,  innovators and narrators of our own digital future because with all its sophistication, it was wholly made in Nigeria. This isn’t just about technology; it’s about ownership and the power to define how Africa’s stories in an era of machine intelligence. We want to ensure that African filmmakers, technologists and cultural leaders are equipped to ethically and  

creatively engage with the technologies that will define the next century of storytelling. This partnership between Rise  Interactive Studios and AFRIFF is more than an event, it is a statement, and it symbolizes a deliberate effort to ensure  that African creativity evolves alongside, not behind it. This workshop and dialogue will help us shape ethical, culturally  grounded and globally competitive frameworks for storytelling in the age of Artificial Intelligence. The question is when  technology starts to Dream, who tells Africa’s Story? said Dr. Toyosi Akerele-Ogunsiji” 

The Full Day Workshop will feature keynote presentations, live demonstrations of AI filmmaking tools, interactive  breakout labs and a fireside conversation. Participants will gain hands-on experience in AI-assisted film creation and  contribute to an open dialogue about the ethics, aesthetics and ownership of machine-made art in Africa. 

Participants should expect to meet some of the brightest minds shaping the future of tech, creativity and innovation as  the Speaker lineup features Victor Hugo Orozco Olvera, Senior Economist and Program Lead for Behavioural Change at the World Bank, Adeoluwa Akintoba, a Key Cast on Makemation movie, Sharath Chandra Guntuku, Associate  Professor of Computer and Information Science at the University of Pennsylvania and Uyi Edoigiawerie, Intellectual  Property & Digital Rights Lawyer who will unpack big ideas and cutting-edge perspectives on artificial intelligence, behavioural insights and digital governance to strengthen Africa’s innovation and creative ecosystems to lead the next  wave of tech-driven transformation. 

As Artificial Intelligence is rapidly changing the global film industry, editing scenes and even generating actors, Africa  stands on the brink of a cultural and creative revolution, this year’s AFRIFF which also includes Nigeria’s first ever Film  and Content Market, provides the ideal backdrop for this AI Workshop, which promises to blend cinema, culture, and  computation in an immersive, day-long learning and networking experience. 

Not designed to be just another talk shop, the expected outcomes from the AI workshop include clear pathways for  collaboration between the creative industry and AI ecosystem, policy and advocacy insights to safeguard Africa’s  creative IP in the age of automation and the empowerment of a new generation of African storytellers inspired to  innovate responsibly with technology. 

AFRIFF Founder and Executive Director, Chioma Ude told journalists that through the years, the Festival, through  screenings, workshops, masterclasses and industry dialogues has championed African voices and facilitated collaborations and that this AI themed cultural dialogue and workshop curated by Rise Interactive Studios, the  dynamic company that created and produced the Continent’s first feature film on AI, is testament to AFRIFF’s recognition of an era in which we must design ways through which intelligent systems will shape African cinema and  what that means for the continent’s creative and technological communities.

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