How a U.K. Charity is Working Directly with Refugees to Bring Greater Authenticity to Migration Stories on Screen
28.06.2024 - 09:37
/ variety.com
Alex Ritman In her 2022 Toronto curtain raiser “The Swimmers,” telling the true story of two Syrian sisters and their emotional and gruelling journey to Europe to escape the civil war, director Sally El-Hossaini went to great lengths to ensure authenticity, using real-life refugees both in-front of and behind the camera. For Counterpoints Arts, the U.K.
charity that focusses on culture and migration, “The Swimmers” offered a great example of how projects involving refugees and migrants could — and should — be developed. As the organization’s co-founder and director Almir Koldzic explains to Variety, El-Hossaini made sure that “people with lived experiences were represented on every level of production and were respected in that process.” Since it launched in 2012, Counterpoints has worked alongside the U.K.
arts scene as part of its efforts to “inspire social change and enhance inclusion and cultural integration,” putting on numerous film screenings concerning the subject, many during the annual Refugee Week, which has become a major international event. But, taking inspiration from “The Swimmers,” it is now actively getting involved in the development process of films itself through a newly-established arm, PopChange Consultancy.
With the issue of immigration having become one of the most pressing of the modern age — and refugees regularly demonised by politicians — the subject has increasingly been finding its way into TV and film, often from filmmakers fighting back against the anti-migrant rhetoric. At last year’s Venice Film Festival, two high-profile features tackled the subject matter in Matteo Garrone’s “Io Capitano” — which won the Italian filmmaker the Silver Lion for best director — and Agnieszka Holland’s
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