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Terms & Conditions: A UK Drill Story

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From the creators of the Grierson Awards nominated Terms & Conditions: A UK Drill Story comes the follow-up YouTube Original Documentary, Terms & Conditions: Deeper Than Drill. Narrated by Academy Award winning actor and rapper, Riz Ahmed, Deeper Than Drill gets to grips with the most challenging and prevalent issues affecting millions of young people across the country today through the eyes of some of the most promising up-and-coming music artists across the UK & Ireland.

In a post-pandemic, post-Brexit world, Terms & Conditions: Deeper Than Drill takes a tour of Britain and Ireland to discover how young artists are making sense of their world through music. In Ireland we meet drill rapper Offica, a refugee from Nigeria who has put strong roots down in the small town of Drogheda; he uses his music to raise issues of race and identity. Sixteen-year-old Kavo lives in Birmingham with his Rwandan parents and paints a vivid musical picture of life in modern Britain for young people. Also in Birmingham is Mowgs, a survivor of county lines drug dealing, and addiction issues. He’s cleaned himself up and is forging a strong musical career. Amongst the dreaming spires of Oxford is rage rapper BVDLVD (BadLad), a thoughtful artist who takes on the online trolls with kindness. And in Bolton is Crystal Millz, an energetic young rapper who uses music to navigate her complex family issues.

Terms & Conditions: Deeper Than Drill is another example of YouTube Originals’ intention to amplify the voices of the UK’s brightest up-and-coming young creatives by providing opportunities to anyone, regardless of their background or location.

 

Source: www.top10films.co.uk

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Deaffeast 2022 Set for in Wolverhampton in May

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A film festival showcasing the work of deaf filmmakers will take over a Wolverhampton cinema in May. Deaffest was created to provide deaf filmmakers with the opportunity to showcase their work, gain recognition for their achievements, and receive professional support in pursuing their aspirations. The festival will arrive at the Light House from May 6 to 8 with exhibitions, seminars, workshops, parties, and networking on the line-up.

First launching in December 2006, the festival takes place every two years and is the brainchild of three Wolverhampton institutions: Zebra Uno, the University of Wolverhampton, and the Light House Media Centre. A spokesperson for the festival said: “We are delighted to bring back Deaffest despite the challenges we have faced and the changes we have had to make for our festival this year. Isolation is an issue for many deaf people at the best of times, and during the pandemic and lockdowns, they have been amongst those who suffered most.

“At Deaffest, we want to “Unlock” this isolation, enabling deaf communities and individuals the freedom to discover a positive sense of their identity and re-connect with their rich culture in deaf films, arts, and BSL. We have seen how people have developed and shared new skills, unlocking their potential and taking the opportunity to create something new. At this festival we are opening our doors to you to come and see what talented deaf filmmakers, artists and performers have to offer. We hope to see many of you join us in celebrating the return of the festival as well as strengthening the strong sense of community.”

Over the years, Deaffest’s vibrant programme of films and events has expanded with the introduction of a series of prestigious competitions, including the annual Young Deaffest Film Awards, the biennial Film Awards Gala, and the much-coveted Ben Steiner Film Bursary. Deaffest introduced its very first Patron in 2012, Richard Griffiths OBE, who sadly passed away in 2013.

Their current Patron is Rachel Shenton, a British actress and writer, who is a committed advocate for raising deaf awareness. Rachel won an Academy Award in 2018 alongside her husband, director Chris Overton, for their short film about a deaf child whose family do not know sign language – The Silent Child. Deaffest is delighted to welcome a new Ambassador of Young Deaffest – Danny Murphy – who is a Deaf actor, filmmaker and presenter.

 

Source: www.expressandstar.com

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Bootcamp Open to Budding Filmmakers – Deadline April 10th

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Budding film-makers are being offered the chance to find out about life behind the camera at a bootcamp. The West Midlands Combined Authority (WMCA) has teamed up with digital agency The Space and Solihull College and University Centre, so people can learn skills directly from professionals working at high profile performing arts organisations like Birmingham Royal Ballet, Birmingham REP, Birmingham Hippodrome and the City of Birmingham Symphony Orchestra. The bootcamp is said to offer an opportunity an insight from some of the best in the industry on how to become a producer, vision mixer, or multi-camera director.

The WMCA has provided £129,000 funding for the skills bootcamp to encourage more people into the performing arts industry and help shape the region’s future film makers. Dr Julie Nugent, director of productivity and skills at WMCA, said: “The live performance bootcamp is a fantastic opportunity to not only get hands on experience for those aspiring to develop a career within the arts but also get the chance to meet some of the best performing arts organisations which are based here in Birmingham.

“We know that the pandemic has impacted the performing arts industry dramatically and this bootcamp is a fantastic way for individuals to learn the skills of the future to bounce back into employment quickly.”

The bootcamp is said to give students an overview of how live performances are recorded and put together as well as offering a hands on experience, working with arts organisations to record and shadow events. After the training, the curriculum development team works with each student to provide CV clinics and industry contacts that can help secure a job.

Applicants must be aged 19 or over and have a postcode within one of the seven metropolitan authorities of the WMCA (Birmingham, Coventry, Dudley, Sandwell, Solihull, Walsall and Wolverhampton). A CV and covering letter should be submitted to livecapturebootcamps@solihull.ac.uk

The deadline for applications is April 10.

Source: www.solihullobserver.co.uk

Kit De Waal Named Patron of Screen and Film School Birmingham

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Award-winning writer Kit De Waal is the newest Patron of Screen and Film School Birmingham. Kit joins Adil Ray OBE, Big Narstie, and Antonio Aakeel on their high-profile roster of student mentors. Whilst still in their first year in Digbeth, the Film School is making great strides in industry engagement and are forging relationships with real experts in the world of the creative arts. Kit is a perfect addition to this illustrious group: she is their first out-and-out writer, and joins actor Antonio, and the multi-talented comedy, music and television personalities Adil and Big Narstie.

About Kit de Waal

Kit is an award-winning writer; her debut novel My Name is Leon won the 2016 Irish Novel of the Year and was being adapted for the BBC. This adaptation is currently being produced by Douglas Road Productions, which was founded by Birmingham hero, Lenny Henry. Set against the backdrop of the race riots in Birmingham in the 1980s, this tender and inspiring tale balances gritty realism with charm and gentle humour, exploring the issues of identity and belonging.
Kit’s other works include The Trick to Time (2018), Becoming Dinah (2019), and Supporting Cast (2020). She also has written for BBC, Radio 4, The Old Vic and The Abbey Theatre in Dublin and co-wrote The Third Day for SKY/HBO/Plan B. Kit’s Production company, Portopia Productions, has also become an Industry Partner to Screen and Film School Birmingham. Kit founded Portopia with her brother Dean O’Loughlin, basing themselves just outside of Birmingham during Lockdown in the summer of 2020. No stranger to the spotlight himself, Dean was also the runner-up on the second series of Channel 4’s ground-breaking reality show, Big Brother. Their mission statement is to actively seek out existing and emerging talent, particularly from under-represented communities, to access, generate and develop ideas they feel will make compelling viewing across film, TV and digital platforms. A notion that chimes with everyone at the Film School.

Response from Kit

This is what their Patron, Kit, had to say about the announcement: “I’m delighted to be a Patron of Screen and Film School Birmingham. It’s a privilege to be right at the beginning of the journey for so many talented young people and I look forward to sharing skills, knowledge and know-how with the Film School and the students. And it’s on my home turf too, so it couldn’t be better!”

College Principal Hannah Stevenson had this to say about the brilliant news: “I am so thrilled to welcome Kit as a Patron to Screen and Film School Birmingham, as well as her production company Portopia as an Industry Partner. It’s exciting for us all to have people who have such strong ties to the region that share our vision. Kit will undoubtedly bring her experiences as a successful writer to the table when mentoring our students. I look forward to developing a long, prosperous relationship between Kit, as well as our new Industry Partner Portopia, and our students.’

Everyone at Screen and Film School Birmingham is thrilled about this announcement and they are looking forward to introducing their students to Kit and for the expert mentoring to begin.

Are you interested in being a part of the new legacy at Screen and Film School Birmingham?
Sign up to one of their Open Days here.

Or find out more information on their courses here.

 

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RTS Bursary Scheme for Talented Lower-Income Students

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The Royal Television Society wants the television industry to reflect the exciting, diverse and talented voices of the Britain of today, and that starts by changing the industry from the inside out.

The RTS Bursary Scheme was launched in 2013 by their Royal Patron, the Prince of Wales. Since then it has evolved and expanded considerably, and have now supported over 240 Bursary Scholars to date. Approximately 80% of graduating cohorts secured employment within the television broadcast industries.

The RTS runs three pioneering schemes – the TV Production and Journalism Bursary, the Digital Innovation Bursary and the Steve Hewlett Scholarship. Bursaries are awarded to talented students from lower-income backgrounds studying an undergraduate degree or HND Level 5 or 6. They will consider candidates studying all subjects: including but not limited to TV Production and Journalism; Humanities and Social Sciences; VFX; Post-Production and STEM related courses. What is important is an evident interest in pursuing a career in television, film or related media industries.

The Bursary provides free RTS membership; industry mentoring; access to the latest events and lectures; and numerous networking opportunities. It also support Scholars financially, awarding £1000 per academic year of study.

What sets our Bursary apart from other similar programmes is the emphasis upon utilising our phenomenal network of RTS members, patrons and supporters. With their help we can show these talented students that TV is attainable and support them in becoming the next generation of change making TV professionals.

For more information about the bursary, how to apply and eligibility criteria, please visit: https://rts.org.uk/education-and-training-pages/rts-bursaries

Submissions will remain open until the 15th July 2022.

 

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WFTVF Four Nations Mentoring Scheme 2022

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Women in Film and TV (WFTV) has launched its 2022 Four Nations Mentoring Scheme, designed for mid-career women working in film, television and creative media looking to take a significant step in their career. In a highly competitive process, 41 mentees were selected from hundreds of applicants from across England, Northern Ireland, Scotland and Wales. The seven-month-long scheme will see each of the participants paired up with senior industry professionals for one-to-one mentoring alongside peer-to-peer training and bespoke career and personal development workshops.

This year, the scheme has attracted many of the country’s leading TV and film experts to mentor the candidates, including Channel 4’s head of drama Caroline Hollick, director Gurinder Chadha, global head of factual at Fremantle Mandy Chang, actor, writer and producer Sharon Horgan, Jonny Taylor and Zainab Ali Khan from commissioning, original documentaries, Netflix, creative director and Co-Founder of ENVY Post-Production Natascha Cadle, DOP Seamus McGarvey, talent executive at BBC Studios Jane Zurakowski, composer Nainita Desai, founder of British Blacklist Akua Gyamfi, and chief marketing officer at BBC Studios Nicki Sheard. The England scheme is backed by the BBC, Channel 4, EON Productions, Indigo Talent, Panalux and Panavision, Pinewood Studios, Sara Putt Associates, the Women’s Network at NBC Universal and UKTV. Netflix continues its support of the schemes in Northern Ireland, Scotland and Wales.

Read the full list of England Mentees here.

Katie Bailiff, CEO of WFTV, said:  ‘The WFTV mentoring scheme is going from strength to strength, and past outcomes show us that the scheme’s carefully curated ingredients successfully unlock our mentees’ potential – enabling them to become the next generation of leaders. It’s an absolute thrill to witness.’

Heading up the scheme is WFTV’s director of mentoring Tracy Forsyth, who is also the board advisor to Channel 4’s Indie Growth Fund. Mentoring producers Karen Kelly in Scotland, Hannah Corneck in Wales, and Sarah McCaffrey in Northern Ireland will continue to run the scheme in their dedicated nations. Forsyth said: ‘It’s thrilling to put together this group of talented women across all aspects of the film and TV industry from producers and screenwriters, to composers and cinematographers, to acquisitions, marketing and business affairs leads. Together they will form a powerful cohort and, with the help of their mentors and all the WFTV scheme offers, I have no doubt they will make a huge impact on the industry.’

You can view the full list of 2022 WFTV Mentees and Mentors here.

 

Source: www.theknowledgeonline.com

 

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BAFTA 2022 Winners

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Congratulations to the 2022 BAFTA winners! Jane Campion’s western The Power of the Dog has won best film at the 2022 BAFTAs, with Campion also winning best director. Denis Villeneuve’s Dune was the most awarded film of the night, winning in five technical categories.  Joanna Scanlan won best actress for her performance in Aleem Khan’s After Love. Best actor was Will Smith for King Richard. Kenneth Branagh’s Belfast was named the year’s outstanding British film, while writer-director Jeymes Samuel won the award for outstanding debut by a British writer, director or producer for his western The Harder They Fall.

Best British short film went to The Black Cop, directed by Cherish Oteka and funded via the BFI Doc Society Fund and BFI NETWORK.

Best film

Winner: The Power of the Dog – Jane Campion, Iain Canning, Roger Frappier, Tanya Seghatchian, Emile Sherman

Belfast – Laura Berwick, Kenneth Branagh, Becca Kovacik, Tamar Thomas
Don’t Look Up – Adam McKay, Kevin Messick
Dune – Mary Parent, Cale Boyter, Denis Villeneuve
Licorice Pizza – Sara Murphy, Paul Thomas Anderson, Adam Somner

Outstanding British film

Winner: Belfast – Kenneth Branagh, Laura Berwick, Becca Kovacik, Tamar Thomas

After Love – Aleem Khan, Matthieu De Braconier
Ali & Ava – Clio Bernard, Tracy O’Riordan
Boiling Point – Philip Barantini, Bart Ruspoli, Hester Ruoff, James Cummings
Cyrano – Joe Wright, Tim Bevan, Eric Fellner, Guy Heely, Erica Schmidt
Everybody’s Talking About Jamie – Jonathan Butterell, Peter Carlton, Mark Herbert, Tom Macrae
House of Gucci – Ridley Scott, Mark Huffam, Giannina Scott, Kevin J Walsh, Roberto Bentivegna, Becky Johnston
Last Night in Soho – Edgar Wright, Tim Bevan & Eric Fellner, Nira Park, Krysty Wilson-Cairns
No Time to Die – Cary Joji Fukunaga, Barbara Broccoli, Michael G. Wilson, Neal Pervis, Robert
Wade, Phoebe Waller-Bridge
Passing – Rebecca Hall, Margot Hand, Nina Yang Bongiovi, Forest Whitaker

Outstanding debut by a British writer, director or producer

Winner: The Harder They Fall – Jeymes Samuel (writer/director) [also written by Boaz Yakin]

After Love – Aleem Khan (writer/director)
Boiling Point – James Cummings (writer), Hester Ruoff (producer) [also written by Philip Barantini and produced by Bart Ruspoli] Keyboard Fantasies – Posy Dixon (writer/director), Liv Proctor (producer)
Passing – Rebecca Hall (writer/director)

Film not in the English language

Winner: Drive My Car – Ryûsuke Hamaguchi, Teruhisa Yamamoto

The Hand of God – Paolo Sorrentino, Lorenzo Mieli
Parallel Mothers – Pedro Almodóvar, Agustín Almodóvar
Petite Maman – Céline Sciamma, Bénédicte Couvreur
The Worst Person in the World – Joachim Trier, Thomas Robsahm

Documentary

Winner: Summer of Soul (or, When the Revolution Could Not Be Televised) – Ahmir “Questlove” Thompson, David Dinerstein, Robert Fyvolent, Joseph Patel

Becoming Cousteau – Liz Garbus, Dan Cogan
Cow – Andrea Arnold, Kat Mansoor
Flee – Jonas Poher Rasmussen. Monica Hellström
The Rescue – Elizabeth Chai Vasarhelyi, Jimmy Chin, John Battsek, P. J. Van Sandwijk

Animated film

Winner: Encanto – Jared Bush, Byron Howard, Yvett Merino, Clarke Spencer

Flee – Jonas Poher Rasmussen. Monica Hellström
Luca – Enrico Casarosa, Andrea Warren
The Mitchells Vs the Machines – Mike Rianda, Phil Lord, Christopher Miller

Director

Winner: The Power of the Dog – Jane Campion

After Love – Aleem Khan
Drive My Car – Ryûsuke Hamaguchi
Happening – Audrey Diwan
Licorice Pizza – Paul Thomas Anderson
Titane – Julia Ducournau

Original screenplay

Winner: Licorice Pizza – Paul Thomas Anderson

Being the Ricardos – Aaron Sorkin
Belfast – Kenneth Branagh
Don’t Look Up – Adam Mckay
King Richard – Zach Baylin

Adapted screenplay

Winner: Coda – Siân Heder

Drive My Car – Ryûsuke Hamaguchi
Dune – Denis Villeneuve
The Lost Daughter – Maggie Gyllenhaal
The Power of the Dog – Jane Campion

Leading actress

Winner: Joanna Scanlan – After Love

Lady Gaga – House of Gucci
Alana Haim – Licorice Pizza
Emilia Jones – Coda
Renate Reinsve – The Worst Person in the World
Tessa Thompson – Passing

Leading actor

Winner: Will Smith – King Richard

Adeel Akhtar – Ali & Ava
Mahershala Ali – Swan Song
Benedict Cumberbatch –  The Power of the Dog
Leonardo Dicaprio – Don’t Look Up
Stephen Graham – Boiling Point

Supporting actress

Winner: Ariana Debose – West Side Story

Caitríona Balfe – Belfast
Jessie Buckley – The Lost Daughter
Ann Dowd – Mass
Aunjanue Ellis – King Richard
Ruth Negga – Passing

Supporting actor

Winner: Troy Kotsur – Coda

Mike Faist – West Side Story
Ciarán Hinds – Belfast
Woody Norman – C’mon C’mon
Jesse Plemons – The Power of the Dog
Kodi Smit-McPhee – The Power of the Dog

Original score

Winner: Dune – Hans Zimmer

Being the Ricardos – Daniel Pemberton
Don’t Look Up – Nicholas Britell
The French Dispatch – Alexandre Desplat
The Power of the Dog – Jonny Greenwood

Casting

Winner: West Side Story – Cindy Tolan

Boiling Point – Carolyn Mcleod
Dune – Francine Maisler
The Hand of God – Massimo Appolloni, Annamaria Sambucco
King Richard – Rich Delia, Avy Kaufman

Cinematography

Winner: Dune – Greig Fraser

Nightmare Alley – Dan Laustsen
No Time to Die – Linus Sandgren
The Power of the Dog – Ari Wegner
The Tragedy of Macbeth – Bruno Delbonnel

Editing

Winner: No Time to Die – Tom Cross, Elliot Graham

Belfast – Úna Ní Dhonghaíle
Dune – Joe Walker
Licorice Pizza – Andy Jurgensen
Summer of Soul (or, When the Revolution Could Not Be Televised) – Joshua L. Pearson

Production design

Winner: Dune – Patrice Vermette, Zsuzsanna Sipos

Cyrano – Sarah Greenwood, Katie Spencer
The French Dispatch – Adam Stockhausen, Rena Deangelo
Nightmare Alley – Tamara Deverell, Shane Vieau
West Side Story – Adam Stockhausen, Rena Deangelo

Costume design

Winner: Cruella – Jenny Beavan

Cyrano – Massimo Cantini Parrini
Dune – Robert Morgan, Jacqueline West
The French Dispatch – Milena Canonero
Nightmare Alley – Luis Sequeira

Makeup and hair

Winner: The Eyes of Tammy Faye – Linda Dowds, Stephanie Ingram, Justin Raleigh

Cruella – Nadia Stacey, Naomi Donne
Cyrano – Alessandro Bertolazzi, Siân Miller
Dune – Love Larson, Donald Mowat
House of Gucci – Frederic Aspiras, Jane Carboni, Giuliano Mariana, Sarah Nicole Tanno

Sound

Winner: Dune – Mac Ruth, Mark Mangini, Doug Hemphill, Theo Green, Ron Bartlett

Last Night in Soho – Colin Nicolson, Julian Slater, Tim Cavagin, Dan Morgan
No Time to Die – James Harrison, Simon Hayes, Paul Massey, Oliver Tarney, Mark Taylor
A Quiet Place Part II –  Erik Aadahl, Michael Barosky, Brandon Proctor, Ethan Van Der Ryn
West Side Story – Brian Chumney, Tod Maitland, Andy Nelson, Gary Rydstrom

Special visual effects

Winner: Dune – Brian Connor, Paul Lambert, Tristan Myles, Gerd Nefzer

Free Guy – Swen Gillberg, Brian Grill, Nikos Kalaitzidis, Daniel Sudick
Ghostbusters: Afterlife – Aharon Bourland, Sheena Duggal, Pier Lefebvre, Alessandro Ongaro
The Matrix Resurrections – Tom Debenham, Hew J Evans, Dan Glass, J. D. Schwaim
No Time to Die – Mark Bokowski, Chris Corbould, Joel Green, Charlie Noble

British short animation

Winner: Do Not Feed the Pigeons – Jordi Morera

Affairs of the Art – Joanna Quinn, Les Mills
Night of the Living Dread – Ida Melum, Danielle Goff, Laura Jayne Tunbridge, Hannah Kelso

British short film

Winner: The Black Cop – Cherish Oteka

Femme – Sam H. Freeman, Ng Choon Ping, Sam Ritzenberg, Hayley Williams
The Palace – Jo Prichard
Stuffed – Theo Rhys, Joss Holden-Rea
Three Meetings of the Extraordinary Committee – Michael Woodward, Max Barron,
Daniel Wheldon

EE Rising Star award (voted for by the public)

Winner: Lashana Lynch

Ariana Debose
Harris Dickinson
Millicent Simmonds
Kodi Smit-McPhee

 

Source: www.bfi.org.uk

Artist and Refugees Create Powerful Climate Crisis Film

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Hundreds of refugee and asylum-seeking women across the world are turning their life stories into artwork for a short film directed by an award-winning Birmingham artist. The Migration Blanket: Climate Solidarity – released to mark International Women’s Month 2022 – tells the story of how climate change is destroying women’s lives, causing early marriage, preventing access to education, causing hunger and leading to violence against women.

From Sierra Leone to Small Heath, the 25-minute film features stories from women and girls who have fled danger from around the world. The film also pays tribute to leading climate activists Greta Thunberg and Vanessa Nakate. Salma Zulfiqar, the founder of the ARTConnects social enterprise and a migrant rights activist, put the film together to give a voice to refugee women around the world – some in Birmingham.

The drawings for the film were created in ARTconnects workshops led by Salma. The artist collected the artwork during sessions from her Small Heath home, where she gave mental health and women’s rights advice. Speaking of her first award-winning film – The Migration Blanket – she said: “I created this film with refugee and migrant girls and women in Birmingham and around the world as many are suffering in silence.”

The project – which was inspired by Salma’s migrant mother, Bano, who died from covid in 2021 – empowered the women involved to take a stand against the climate emergency and call out how it was disproportionately impacting their lives globally.

“The film gives vulnerable refugee and marginalised women a voice, empowers them with knowledge on climate change and encourages them to take action, as well as improving their mental health,” Salma said. “This film is a call to ensure women’s rights are protected as a key element in climate action and any policy making,” she added.

The project highlights the shared experience of women in the face of climate change.

I’ve witnessed women in Bangladesh who’ve been widowed, left destitute and can’t fend for themselves due to cyclones caused by climate change,” Salma said. “Women in Kenya who’ve lost their cattle and farmland destroyed by drought and were forced to move, live rough on wasteland and become vulnerable to violence, including rape.”

Shofika, a Rohingya refugee, is one young woman who shared her story and art for the project. She said: “Our house was destroyed and we couldn’t go to school when the floods came. Climate change destroyed our agricultural land.”

Molika, a Bangladeshi student in Birmingham, shares Shofika’s pain in seeing her beloved village swept up in harsh rains and violent floods. She said: “Flooding caused by the heavy rains is stopping girls from going to school. Girls face many problems at home when the parents can’t earn money from their land due to drought or heavy rain. In Bangladesh, this is happening in the village I came from and it’s making life hard for women.”

The ARTConnects workshops are supported by MAC Birmingham and support refugees and asylum seekers. The film is a sequel to the first award-winning film, which won Best Animated Short at the Berlin Independent Film Festival.

Andy Street, the Mayor of the West Midlands, said: “This is a powerful film which raises awareness of the urgent action we all need to take together to tackle the climate emergency and help make a positive difference to the lives of some of our sadly isolated and marginalised women in the West Midlands and right across the Commonwealth.”

The film will be shown at the Commonwealth Games 2022 and during the Venice Biennale, from April to November 2022, with other venues across Europe and the US too.

 

Source: www.birminghammail.co.uk

 

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ParentWise Film Highlights Midlands Actors and Experts

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A Lichfield expert is featuring in a new campaign raising awareness of the harms children can be exposed to in modern society. The ParentWise initiative will feature a short film starring young actors from across the Midlands. It aims to help parents and carers spot signs that things may be wrong with young people and the steps they can take to address any issues.

The film also features experts, including Lichfield-based child psychologist Dr Louise Earley. She said: “Supporting your child to navigate growing up and taking steps to greater independence can be a challenging time for many parents and carers. While it’s normal to have concerns around sudden changes of behaviour, the ParentWise platform details a helpful guide on how to spot signs that could mean your child is facing an issue. “The hub also contains practical advice and links to relevant charities on how to start and manage conversations about delicate topics, so I urge all parents to have a look at the support available.”

The film is designed to signpost parents and carers to www.gov.uk/parentwise, where they can find links to help and support, as well as advice on what to do when noting a change in a child’s behaviour.

Safeguarding Minister Rachel Maclean said: “It is vital that parents know where to turn if they think that their child is at risk. “I am pleased the West Midlands has been chosen to pilot this new resource, which I hope will be the blueprint for bringing together support and advice for parents and carers right across the country.”

 

Source: lichfieldlive.co.uk

 

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‘Peaky Blinders’ Season 6 Premiere Sets UK Series Launch Record

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The highly-anticipated Season 6 premiere of period gangster epic Peaky Blinders was watched by 3.8 million viewers in the UK on Sunday, according to overnight figures. That makes it the biggest launch for the Shelby clan ever, coming in above the Season 5 debut’s 3.7 million overnight average. It also ties the series record previously set by the Season 5 finale in September 2019. The market share was 21.8% on Sunday with a peak of 4.1 million viewers. The episode faced strong competition from the season finale of ITV drama Trigger Point which ended up winning the 9pm slot.

Airing on the UK’s BBC One, ahead of the global Netflix release which is as-yet undated, the first episode of Peaky’s sixth and final season was dedicated to the memory of Helen McCrory who passed away last year after a battle with cancer. The episode also revealed how creator Steven Knight, director Anthony Byrne and the producers handled the fate of McCrory’s Aunt Polly — a key figure in the Shelby family.

Season 6 is the last run of the Cillian Murphy-led drama in series form. However, Knight confirmed to us over the weekend that a movie is definitely going to happen with the same players.

In Season 6, Murphy’s Tommy Shelby will square off with various foes, but the most formidable enemy he has is himself. Also returning are Tom Hardy, Paul Anderson, Finn Cole, Anya Taylor-Joy, Natasha O’Keeffe and Sophie Rundle, among others. Stephen Graham and James Frecheville will also appear.

Peaky Blinders began airing on BBC Two in 2013 and went on to win the BAFTA for Best Drama in its fourth season. It then moved to BBC One in 2019 and has continued to grow its rabid fanbase. Executive producers are Caryn Mandabach, Steven Knight, Jamie Glazebrook, David Mason, Anthony Byrne and Cillian Murphy.

 

Source: www.deadline.com

 

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