At Sheffield DocFest, the conversation isn’t just about films — it’s about how films get made, who gets to make them, and what knowledge looks like when it crosses borders.

“Letter Across the Channel: Five Years of Transnational Filmmaking and Education” is that conversation brought to life. For five years, this program has linked three very different cinema worlds: the UK, Nigeria, and Germany. Through filmmaking, students don’t just learn technique. They use the camera to critically explore culture, authorship, and knowledge-making itself.

It’s not “UK teaches, others learn.” The model is transnational by design. Students in Sheffield, Lagos, and Berlin work as peers. They question whose stories get centered, what counts as “authoritative” footage, and how collaboration changes when power isn’t one-directional. The result: films that feel less like assignments and more like letters — sent across the Channel, across continents, with real questions inside.

Ike Nnaebue in the room
Nigerian filmmaker Ike Nnaebue, founder of LP House of Creatives, is part of this edition on two fronts.

First, he’s attending with some of his interns from LP House of Creatives — giving them direct exposure to DocFest’s global conversations on documentary ethics, craft, and distribution.

Second, Ike is one of four panel curators for “Letter Across the Channel.” As a director who literally drove the migration route for No U-Turn to understand story from the inside, his curation brings a ground-level perspective. He’s helping shape discussions on authorship and knowledge-making from a Nigerian lens: What happens when African filmmakers aren’t just “subjects” in international programs, but co-architects of the curriculum?

With Ike on the curation panel alongside peers from the UK and Germany, the program leans into what it preaches: shared authorship, shared responsibility.

Why it matters at Sheffield DocFest
DocFest is one of the world’s leading documentary festivals. “Letter Across the Channel” fits its core idea: documentary isn’t just product, it’s process. After five years, the program shows what happens when students from three cinema cultures spend years learning from each other instead of just about each other.
For Ike and his interns, it’s a chance to see LP House of Creatives’ work reflected in a global context — and to bring those insights back to Lagos.

For the rest of us, it’s proof that the future of documentary education isn’t in one film school. It’s in the letters we write across channels, borders, and assumptions.

Sheffdocfest.com is where the letters land this year. And Ike Nnaebue is helping make sure Lagos’ voice is in the reply.

