Following three people who have each overcome suicidal periods, as they use their experiences to support others facing similar struggles.
This is your one stop shop to access information and booking links to all of our in-person festival events as well as your pass for our online-only programme wherever you are.
We have a truly exciting five days lined up for London Breeze – our biggest and best to date. This includes a gala opening film, an industry day, an immersive program of AR/VR/XR films, shorts programs, UK feature fiction and documentary premieres and previews, Impact Day, Youth and Family Day, and of course our awards ceremony and party. We can’t wait to see you – start booking your tickets now!
The Breeze Online Pass is still available for purchase. All the shorts, feature films and documentaries included in the online programme will be available to watch – as many times as you wish – throughout the festival and beyond (23 October – 4 November 2024).
Following three people who have each overcome suicidal periods, as they use their experiences to support others facing similar struggles.
Mum would never lie to me, would she? Innocent Bobby discovers the answer to this question when she is surprised by a last-minute hospital trip.
A multi-layered love story about young women living in a strict, fundamentalist, polygamous society in 2003 Utah, USA.
When Fred Rogers faces sudden blindness from LHON, his determined mother enlists a local pro to teach him golf, unlocking a trance that defies his limitations.
Hey Little One explores the intensity of the bond of attachment between a hospitalised baby, and her parents’ friends, who regularly rock her in the hospital.
A worker is pulling a late shift, feeling the strain of life, when his computer surprises him with three wishes.
Triumph over adversity through the power of music. Entwining skill and historical music nuances to overcome diversity, disability and exclusion.
Margaret’s childhood memories are reinterpreted through the complex filter of the South Asian 1960s/70s diaspora, to find common ground of what is home, family and loss.
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