Tomorrow’s Freedom (2022) directed by Georgia and Sophia Scott
Film screening presented with Toronto Palestine Film Festival
97 minutes
2022 – United Kingdom
Arabic, English with English Subtitles
Date
Friday May 31
7PM (Doors open at 6:30PM)
Location
Innis Town Hall
Innis College, 2 Sussex Ave
Toronto
Accessibility
Wheelchair accessible with assistive mobility devices at the rear of Town Hall. The theatre has power-assisted doors for full access. Assistive-listening devices are also available by request. An accessible gender-neutral washroom is located on the third floor.
Tomorrow’s Freedom reveals a man with a steadfast dream for the liberation of Palestine. This film screening is followed by a discussion.
Made over the course of 5 years, the documentary film gains intimate access to the family of imprisoned Palestinian political leader, Marwan Barghouthi. Often described as the ‘Palestinian Nelson Mandela,’ Barghouthi is serving five life sentences in an Israeli prison. Through a collage of in-depth interviews from the people who know him best, including lawyers, his sons and his wife Fadwa, the immersive documentary is an unflinchingly honest and transformative journey into the saga of Palestinian prisoners, their loved ones, and political representation of Palestinians under ongoing occupation.
The Toronto Palestine Film Festival (TPFF) is a volunteer-run, non-profit organization dedicated to bringing Palestinian cinema, music, cuisine and art to GTA audiences. TPFF was conceived in 2008 to commemorate the 60th anniversary of Al-Nakba.
Georgia Scott is an experienced producer, director and editor. Her first documentary film, set in Kenya explored the threats facing a unique Swahili community on Lamu Island on the border with Somalia. Georgia graduated with a BA (hons) degree in Production Design from the University of the Arts, London in 2011. She went on to manage a product design company before setting up GroundTruth Productions with Sophia Scott in 2012.
Sophia Scott is an experienced producer, director and cinematographer and has worked extensively as a self shooting camerawoman across the globe on projects for the BBC, UN, PBS, CBC, The New York Times and Human Rights Watch among others. After completing a foundation year at the European Film College in Denmark in 2002 she went on to study Documentary Film and Television graduating with a BA (Hons ) from the International Film School of Wales before moving to Kenya where she spent the first 6 years of her film career.