The Doha Film Institute is expanding its footprint as one of the Arab world’s most active talent incubators with new vocational training programs developed in partnership with France’s prestigious film school, La Fémis, and Gobelins Paris, the country’s leading animation school. The initiative, announced on Nov. 26 during the Doha Film Festival, marks one of DFI’s most ambitious education pushes to date, aimed at fast-tracking the next wave of creatives across the region.
Backed by the Institut Français du Qatar and Qatar Museums, the programs represent DFI’s long-term strategy and investment in expanding access to industry-ready training as the demand for skilled crew, animators, and content creators is surging, particularly across the Gulf. The launch also arrives as Qatar positions itself as a growing creative hub, investing heavily in both production capacity and infrastructure.
“Vocational training represents the future of learning,” said DFI CEO Fatma Hassan Alremaihi. “In a fast-changing world, we must empower young people with education that is practical, adaptable, and connected to real opportunities. Our partnerships with La Fémis and Gobelins Paris add to our year-round workshops and mentoring sessions that have helped build a thriving creative ecosystem in Qatar and the wider region.” The La Fémis Cinematography Certificate Program, set for a June 2026 launch, will deliver a four-month, hands-on training course blending theory, exercises, and both online and in-person sessions. Designed to give participants a solid foundation in the creative and technical responsibilities of a director of photography, the program aims to give emerging cinematographers the industry-facing skills needed to compete on global productions.
Gobelins will lead a nine-month Animation Certificate Program, beginning in September 2026, structured around three modules in animation fundamentals, character performance, and visual storytelling. With a mix of lectures, practical workshops in Doha, and continuous online follow-up, each module culminates in a completed project, and graduates receive a Gobelins Certificate of Achievement. The program is also designed to complement DFI’s existing ToonBoom certification, creating a more complete training pipeline for regional animators. The move underscores DFI’s strategy of pairing local talent development with global partnerships, a model the institute has leaned on across its labs, fellowships, and festival initiatives over 15 years. The new vocational tracks, which emphasize mentorship and real-world application, further signal an investment in building sustainable creative industries rather than short-term workshops alone. By embedding internationally recognized schools directly into Qatar’s training landscape, the institute is looking to create not just access, but a pathway from introductory courses to specialized professional training, without requiring young creatives to leave the region. “Our focus is on placing skills, creativity, and hands-on experience at the heart of how we prepare the next generation of storytellers,” Alremaihi insisted. “These programs are pathways into the industry, bridges to global networks, and catalysts for creativity across our region.”