The focus of World Film Collective has primarily been on young people. The workshop format has been taken to schools and communities around the world, creating a valuable, transcultural insight into the experience of youth.
Tinashe is one of our highly skilled and dedicated tutors responsible for training our student reporters in the townships around Cape Town. Here he shares some insight into the workshop process and his experience sharing his knowledge and skills to empower a new generation.
World Film Collective is proud to be empowering a new generation of citizen journalists and news reporters in South Africa. Watch this space for their latest reports!
This film was inspired by the poem “Anti Social Behaviour Orders” written by Felix Dennis. It was created by six young people in East London in a Visual Art workshop which examined the relationship between video and written text.
This film was created by students in World Film Collective’s Level 1 Documentary workshop at the Bint Al-Wazir school in Ramallah, Palestine. The girls at this school face a serious problem at break time, as the hierarchies that develop in any school prevent the younger girls from accessing the canteen.
This film was created by our students at the Bint Al-Wazir school in Ramallah, Palestine.This film explores the harmful effects of one of the most consumed products across the globe- Coca Cola.
At our first tutor training workshop in Brasil, tutors are asked to produce and star in their own film shot entirely on a mobile-phone. This helps them to understand the activities they then teach to participants in the workshop.
This short film produced by participants from our Level 2 documentary workshop in Morros dos Prazeres favela, Rio de Janeiro focuses on life in the favela. All footage is shot on a mobile phone and edited by the participants, producing candid interviews with some of the local individuals in the favela.
Are we born with dreams or goals? This short film focuses on interviewing locals from the Morros dos Prazeres favela, Rio de Janeiro to ask them this very question. All footage is shot on a mobile phone and edited by the participants from the Level 2 documentary workshop.