
Ile Ife is the ancestral home of the progenitor of the Yoruba people, Oduduwa and the source of Yoruba civilization.
The Yoruba Film Festival (YFF), according to the founder and initiator, Segun Omoworare is created to screen films with Yoruba themes. The festival, according to the organisers, would exhibit industry interactions, features films, shorts, documentaries, conversations and awards in order to explore the Yoruba identity, the contemporary Yoruba experience in Nigeria and Africa and the richness of Yoruba culture in a diverse modern world.

The Yoruba people pioneered the film industry in Nigeria with the itinerant Alarinjo Theatre, made popular by the late theatre doyen, Chief Hubert Ogunde.
The Yoruba indigenous movie thrives in Nollywood, adjudged Africa’s largest movie industry in terms of value and the number of movies produced per year. It is also Nigeria’s most persuasive cultural agent and significant cultural export.
Significantly, films of Yoruba cultural distinction lead the regional creative sectors and are noteworthy to Nollywood’s output.
There is no doubt that the Yoruba heritage of dance, drama and storytelling, which formed the superstructure of the enduring itinerant Yoruba Traveling Theater (Alarinjo) was a stimulus to the emergence of Nollywood, said Omoworare.
“We take pride in the contributions of the Yoruba filmmakers to the socio-cultural, technical and economic development of the Nigerian film industry, he concluded.


