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Lagos Is The Only African City at Goes to Cannes 2026 — What This Really Means

Africa’s seat at Goes to Cannes 2026 has a Lagos address.
Goes to Cannes 2026 Goes to Cannes 2026
Goes to Cannes 2026. Credit: Marche Du Film

For the first time in history, an African city will represent an entire continent at the world’s most prestigious film market, Goes to Cannes 2026. And that city is Lagos.

Goes to Cannes 2026 has officially named Lagos as its only African partner city,. Likewise, the Africa International Film Festival (AFRIFF) will serve as the continent’s sole curator. It is a landmark moment, not just for Nigerian cinema, but for African storytelling at large.

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What is the Cannes Film Festival?

The Cannes Film Festival, held annually in May at the Palais des Festivals et des Congrès in Cannes, France, is the world’s most prestigious and publicised film festival. First held in 1946, it has grown into the global headquarters of cinema. This festival is home to the biggest deals in filmmaking, career launches, and deciding the direction of world film. 

At its commercial core sits the Marché du Film (Cannes Film Market). It is one of the largest film markets on the planet. The Cannes Film Market draws over 12,500 industry professionals annually. It also generates between $600 million and $1 billion in total deal turnover.

What is Goes to Cannes 2026 About?

Goes to Cannes 2026
Credit: Marche Du Film

Within that market lives the Goes to Cannes programme. This is an exclusive platform for film festivals from around the world. It gives them a curated window to pitch their works-in-progress directly to global distributors, financiers, and festival programmers. 

Running from 15–18 May 2026, Lagos joins Adelaide, Hong Kong, Rio de Janeiro, Montevideo, Tallinn, and Tokyo as this year’s partner cities. It is the only African city on that list.

AFRIFF and Lagos Represent Africa at Goes to Cannes 2026

AFRIFF’s role this year is significant. As the participating partner, the festival will curate between five and seven from Nigeria and other African countries. These films will span genres from thriller to documentary to animation. AFRIFF will pitch each one to international buyers in a two-hour market window. 

Selected films must be in post-production, unseen at any international festival, and unreleased online. For chosen filmmakers, the reward is a potential sales agent, co-production deal, or festival premiere slot secured before the film even wraps.

Credit: TVC

This did not happen overnight. In May 2025, AFRIFF founder Chioma Ude signed a landmark Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) with the Nigerian Ministry of Art, Culture, and the Creative Economy at Cannes itself. This deal birthed the AFRIFF Film and Content Market (AFCM). The Goes to Cannes selection is the next chapter of that agreement.

What’s at Stake for the African Film Market?

The cultural stakes are just as high as the commercial ones. For years, Nigerian and African filmmakers have navigated global markets individually. They’ve had to buy their own access and build their own connections with no institutional backing. 

This partnership changes the structure around that. Now, Lagos is recognised as a film city in the fullest industry sense. That recognition commands collective representation, investment interest, and a seat at the table deciding global cinema.

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