Film & TV Funding Award Winners 2022

We are very happy to announce this year’s winners of The Whickers Film & TV Funding Award. The winners were announced following The Whickers Pitch on Sunday 26th June 2022 at Sheffield Doc/Fest. The prestigious top prize worth £100,000 was awarded to Chinmoy Sonowal and Ragini Nath with Our Hoolocks, and our runner-up £20,000 development fund went to Toby Bull with Re-Evaluation. Click on the images below for further details on these amazing projects.

Read more in our 2022 catalogue HERE.

Our Hoolocks | Chinmoy Sonowal & Ragini Nath (Winner)

Re-Evaluation | Toby Bull (Runner-up)

Kamay | Ilyas Yourish & Shahrokh Bikaran

After a young girl from the mountains of central Afghanistan mysteriously commits suicide inside Kabul University, her family’s calm rural life enters into a painful and exhausting process. Her parents are now looking for justice in one of the most corrupt judicial systems in the world; while Freshta, their younger daughter, attempts to gain admission to the same university to complete what her sister had started.

Three years ago, Ilyas Yourish and Shahrokh Bikaran, decided to tell the story of Kamay; their own story. Born and raised in Afghanistan and having traveled the country extensively, both of them felt uniquely positioned to observe their homeland through their lenses. Shahrokh has graduated in 2016 from The Tehran Film School, where he studied directing, score composition, and Audio Engineering. He has since been involved in the creation of more than ten documentaries. Ilyas has graduated in 2014 from the Faculty of Journalism at Kabul University. Since 2011, he has worked as a journalist, researcher, and filmmaker. Ilyas and Shahrokh have recently established their Afghanistan-based Film Production Company.

Mandy Chang, Commissioning Editor of BBC Storyville and a member of the judging panel, said about Kamay: “The judges were struck by an incredibly cinematic story that shows a different side of a country we haven’t seen before. It’s about the quest for justice and the role of women in a society trying to free itself from the past and find hope for the future.”

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Red Herring | Kit Vincent

In the midst of shocking family revelations, a young filmmaker is diagnosed with terminal cancer. What follows is an intimate and darkly humorous journey of a family’s attempt to make sense of their upended past and disrupted future.

Kit Vincent is a director/producer with an interest in character driven stories, that use humour to explore nuanced, real life drama. Kit began his career working on flagship documentary series’ for Channel 4 and other UK broadcasters and attended the Sundance Talent Forum as part of the Documentary Film Programme in 2019. Red Herring is his debut feature.

Gary Kam, Oscar-Winning Producer and a member of our judging panel said: “The director is on his way with a camera. The destination he is taking us to is not an unavoidable place but a way of appreciating the excursion on earth. With courage, openness and sometimes humour, the director’s cinematic journey takes us to a secret destination; The meaning of life, family and love. With the support from The Whickers, the jury hopes that this project will become a trail to follow in an inevitable story that we have to become the protagonists.”

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Our Hoolocks | Ragini Nath & Chinmoy Sonowal

Sidhanta, a fisherman in Assam, has been fighting to protect the Hoolock Gibbons, India’s fast-vanishing ape species, in his village. However, this endearing tale of human-animal coexistence is threatened when a nearby oilfield disrupts the delicate ecosystem and his relationship with the Hoolocks, who are dying at an alarming rate.

Ragini Nath is a documentary filmmaker from Northeast India whose work is a medley of visual imagery and reflective storytelling on resource politics and climate justice. Chinmoy Sonowal is a filmmaker exploring visual storytelling through creative documentaries, with a keen interest in the environment and wildlife. 

When Ragini and Chimnoy heard they were finalist’s, they said: “When we opened the email, it took us a few seconds to register what just happened! We are so overwhelmed and honoured that our film is one of the finalists for The Whickers. This means so much to us and will be such an amazing platform to showcase our story from the corners of Northeast India.”

Jane Mote, Editorial Consultant at The Whickers and a member of our judging panel said: “This a film that has so much too offer – stunning scenery, natural history (with a rare colony of gibbons seen up close) and a community that celebrates the environmental riches surrounding them. But the realities of the outside world, and the choices that individuals have to make to balance their short-term needs with the longer-term needs of nature become the driving narrative that casts a shadow over the fragility of their lives. This is a relatable, accessible story told with wit and humanity, which is a mirror for us all.”

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Re-Evaluation | Toby Bull

Grieving his parents’ untimely deaths, filmmaker Toby Bull digs up their diaries and home videos, discovering the abuse they faced as children – and their hopes of healing through a secretive psychotherapy movement called Re-Evaluation Counselling. Interviewing his parents’ surviving friends and undergoing RC therapy himself, Toby grapples with this controversial organisation, in the hope that it will help him to understand and overcome his own traumatic childhood.

Toby Bull is an award-winning English filmmaker whose films have screened internationally at festivals like Visions du Réel, Viennale, MoMI First Look, and Hamptons IFF, and who is currently making work about his parents’ untimely deaths and their participation in a secretive psychotherapy movement.

When Toby heard he was a finalist, he said: “Wow! I’ve been sitting with this story for many years so I’m extremely excited to be nominated for The Whickers and to receive such an amazing opportunity to start sharing this project with the wider world.”

Jo Lapping, Head of Factual Acquisitions at the BBC and a member of our judging panel said: “We were moved by the multiple layers of this personal story; the emotional twists and turns it offers along the way combined with the social history of a particular moment in time. We were also impressed by the Director’s written treatment which showed the potential for an insightful and compelling voice.”

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Re-Evaluation | Toby Bull

Grieving his parents’ untimely deaths, filmmaker Toby Bull seeks solace from their diaries and home videos. Instead, he uncovers a horror story. Their archive seems to reveal the ongoing trauma of childhood abuse – and their hope of healing through a secretive psychotherapy movement called Re-Evaluation Counselling. Interviewing his parents’ surviving friends and undergoing RC therapy himself, Toby grapples with this controversial organisation, in the hope that it will help him to re-evaluate the past he thought he knew.

Toby Bull is an award-winning English filmmaker whose short films have screened internationally at festivals like Visions du Réel, Viennale, MoMI First Look, and Hamptons IFF.

When Toby heard he won the award, he said: “I’m extremely excited and honoured to receive this year’s runner-up award from The Whickers. This development fund come at the perfect time as it will enable my team and I to further develop the project by answering key questions about the film’s final form at this early stage, before taking it out into the world.”

Oli Harbottle, Head of Distribution and Acquisitions at the BBC and a member of our judging panel said: The judges were all incredibly impressed by Toby’s pitch, his film promises to use his own deeply personal story to address universal themes of trauma, grief and our relationships with our parents. It’s exciting to support Toby as he continues to unearth more material and we look forward to seeing the direction in which the film goes.

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Our Hoolocks | Ragini Nath & Chinmoy Sonowal

Sidhanta, a fisherman in Assam, has been fighting to protect the Hoolock Gibbons, India’s fast-vanishing ape species, in his village. However, this endearing tale of human-animal coexistence is threatened when a nearby oilfield disrupts the delicate ecosystem and his relationship with the Hoolocks, who are dying at an alarming rate.

Ragini Nath is a documentary filmmaker from Northeast India whose work is a medley of visual imagery and reflective storytelling on resource politics and climate justice. Chinmoy Sonowal is a filmmaker exploring visual storytelling through creative documentaries, with a keen interest in the environment and wildlife. 

When Ragini accepted the award, she said: “This is so overwhelming and I cannot sum up the words what it means to keep going with the film. I would really like to thank The Whickers and Sheffield DocFest for giving us the support to bring a story from the corners of North East India to a much wider audience. More than that, I would really like to thank Valerie, Jane, Emily and the jury for giving a platform for first time filmmakers coming from Ukraine, China, Germany, Cameroon and the UK. We really felt a sense of community and the courage to go forward with the stories we want to tell.”

Jo Lapping, Head of Factual Acquisitions at the BBC and a member of our judging panel said: Ragini and Chinmoy’s passionate commitment to telling the story of this community and the beautiful animals they are endeavouring to protect, promises to provide the audience with an immersive and moving insight into their world.

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