Digital storytelling is a co-creative media practice developed in California in the early 1990s in which ordinary' people are taught to create short, usually autobiographical digital stories'. This article focuses on arguably the most famous digital storytelling project - the BBC's Capture Wales' programme - to argue that not only are these digital stories, which are produced in workshop settings by non-professionals and exhibited primarily on the Internet in digital archives, cinema' but, moreover, that they collectively constitute a kind of national cinema'. Crofts has, for example, argued that [l]ocal cultural traditions and their articulation through film' have underpinned the best-known' national cinema movements', which have tended to emerge at historical moments when nationalism connects with genuinely populist movements to produce specifically national films that can claim a cultural authenticity or rootedness' (4). This is the reading of Capture Wales - as, in fact, a co-creative national cinema - that this article offers.