Notes from Susan: Why Hopeful Movies Deserve Recognition

Notes from Susan: Why Hopeful Movies Deserve Recognition

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Why Hopeful Movies Deserve Recognition

By Susan MacLaury

With awards season coming to a close and festival season beginning in earnest, I have been thinking a lot about the way in which our community awards and elevates films. 

For as long as I can remember, the big honors at shows like the Oscars, the SAG Awards, and the BAFTAs have been presented to films defined by their artistic nature, their grit and tragedy, or their production value. Few movies have been able to break through this mold, with a few notable exceptions, the most recent being CODA.  

When CODA was awarded Best Picture at the 2022 Academy Awards, many called it “an upset,” because it deviated from what we have come to expect from award-winning films.

Rare is it to find a movie about a deaf family that doesn’t end in tragedy. Too often films about marginalized communities focus unilaterally on what it takes to survive, rather than the resilience required to truly live.  A movie that captures the experiences of both the deaf and the hearing bridges those worlds in a way that not only is authentic but also sparks joy, inspires hope, and reveals possibilities to audiences.

It was for these reasons that when Inocente won an Academy Award for Best Documentary Short in 2013 –  we couldn’t believe that our colorful, crowdfunded coming-of-age story had been selected, we simply didn’t fit the mold.

But that’s not how it should be. 

Films like Inocente or CODA do more than allow you to escape – they inspire action, compassion, and insight into other worlds. They are catalysts that drive people to step out of themselves and learn more about those who are underrepresented on and off the screen. These are the types of films Shine Global is committed to honoring at our first-ever Children’s Resilience in Film Award this fall. Through May 31, Shine Global is seeking submissions from filmmakers that seek to shine a light on the resilience of children and their families. Five nominees will be selected and their movies will be screened in New York City in September, and the award for Best Picture along with a $25,000 prize will be awarded in Los Angeles in October. 

Creating films that center on the resilience of children and their families, inspire change, and move individuals to action is at the heart of what we do – and we can’t wait to find others who feel as passionate about it as we do.  

Film submissions are accepted through FilmFreeway by May 31st: https://filmfreeway.com/ShineGlobalChildrensResilienceinFilm

Dr. Susan MacLaury, PhD, LSW is the co-founder and Executive Director of the non-profit media company Shine Global which gives voice to underserved children and their families by telling their stories of resilience to raise awareness, promote action, and inspire change.  She executive produced the Academy Award® Winning documentary Inocente, the Emmy Award®-winning, Academy Award®-nominated War/Dance, as well as The Harvest (La Cosecha), 1 Way Up in 3D, The Eagle Huntress, Through Our Eyes: Homefront, and Liyana. She is also the producer of the documentary films The Wrong Light and Virtually Free and co-producer of Tre Maison Dasan. Susan is dually degreed in social work administration and health education and was associate professor of health education at Kean University from 1994 through 2013.

Shine Global is an award-winning non-profit media company that gives voice to children and their families by sharing their stories of resilience to raise awareness, promote action, and inspire change. We produce inspiring films and compelling content about at-risk children. Through tailored distribution and outreach, we connect with our audiences in communities, classrooms, museums, and on capitol hill as part of a powerful engagement campaign to encourage social change.

Donate to Shine Global

Support our work transforming children’s lives through film

Notes from Susan: Bangladesh Shutters Dozens of Schools Set Up by Rohingya in Camps

Notes from Susan: Bangladesh Shutters Dozens of Schools Set Up by Rohingya in Camps

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Bangladesh Shutters Dozens of Schools Set Up by Rohingya in Camps

Image from the upcoming film “Hossain”

By Susan MacLaury

This is a challenging time to care about human rights when so many are being trampled around the world with seeming impunity. The rights of Ukrainians to live safely in a democracy. The rights of American women to make reproductive choices. And now the rights of more than 400,000 school-age children to pursue education in the Rohingya refugee camps in Bangladesh.

While filming our documentary “Hossain” about a 6-year old Rohingya child whose family has lived in a Bangladesh camp since 2018, we saw that only Koranic schools existed for refugees originally. Bangladesh prohibits humanitarian groups from providing Rohingya children education beyond basic, informal primary level classes, and many community groups and schools arose to fill that gap. In November 2021, the Bangladeshi government allowed UNICEF to offer education consistent with Myanmar curricular standards as a pilot program for 10,000 older Rohingya children. However, as of today, dozens of the community schools have been summarily closed due to an unfounded fear that if a generation of Rohingya are educated in Bangladesh, they will never leave the country.

The fact of the matter is that many Rohingya parents say that their return to Myanmar and successful resettlement depends on their children being properly educated. It is time we start listening to our young people and their families; they know what they need to grow into resilient individuals, we just have to hear them.

Read more: https://www.nytimes.com/2022/05/02/world/asia/rohingya-bangladesh-school-closings.html 
and https://www.hrw.org/news/2022/03/21/bangladesh-officials-threaten-rohingya-setting-schools

Dr. Susan MacLaury, PhD, LSW is the co-founder and Executive Director of the non-profit media company Shine Global which gives voice to underserved children and their families by telling their stories of resilience to raise awareness, promote action, and inspire change.  She executive produced the Academy Award® Winning documentary Inocente, the Emmy Award®-winning, Academy Award®-nominated War/Dance, as well as The Harvest (La Cosecha), 1 Way Up in 3D, The Eagle Huntress, Through Our Eyes: Homefront, and Liyana. She is also the producer of the documentary films The Wrong Light and Virtually Free and co-producer of Tre Maison Dasan. Susan is dually degreed in social work administration and health education and was associate professor of health education at Kean University from 1994 through 2013.

Shine Global is an award-winning non-profit media company that gives voice to children and their families by sharing their stories of resilience to raise awareness, promote action, and inspire change. We produce inspiring films and compelling content about at-risk children. Through tailored distribution and outreach, we connect with our audiences in communities, classrooms, museums, and on capitol hill as part of a powerful engagement campaign to encourage social change.

 

 

Donate to Shine Global

Support our work transforming children’s lives through film

Susan MacLaury Receives SUNY Cortland Honorary Degree

Susan MacLaury Receives SUNY Cortland Honorary Degree

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Susan MacLaury Receives SUNY Cortland Honorary Degree

CORTLAND, NY – On Saturday, May 14th, Susan MacLaury, executive director and co- founder of the nonprofit media company Shine Global behind the Academy Award and Emmy Award winning films Inocente and War/Dance, received an honorary doctoral degree from her alma mater State University of New York (SUNY) Cortland. MacLaury will also deliver a keynote address at the morning undergraduate ceremony.

“I am incredibly grateful and humbled to receive this honorary degree from my alma mater,” said Susan MacLaury, executive director of Shine Global. “Since my time at SUNY Cortland, I’ve ventured into many different lines of work, with lots of trial and error along the way. It was at SUNY Cortland that I learned it’s ok to try and fail and that’s the message I want to share with the next generation of leaders, innovators, and creatives. I couldn’t have found success in social work, education, and filmmaking without the foundation and guidance my professors gave me as an undergrad all those years ago.”

Since graduating in 1968, MacLaury’s prolific career spans three different fields of work: education, social work, and documentary filmmaking. A licensed social worker and a passionate advocate for women’s reproductive rights, MacLaury has spent much of her career working directly with young people to teach them about health, sexuality, and substance abuse. She has taught at a number of colleges and universities, and served as an associate professor of health education at Kean University from 1994 to 2014.

In 2005, MacLaury co-founded Shine Global with her husband Albie Hecht, and has led and overseen numerous productions of groundbreaking, unflinching films on issues of child labor, child abuse, child soldiering, and the impact of war. In 2007, MacLaury executive-produced War/Dance, a widely-acclaimed, Emmy-winning documentary profiling Acholi children refugees living in Patongo, the northern Ugandan refugee camp under military protection from terrorist group Lord’s Resistance Army. In 2013, MacLaury executively-produced Inocente, an Academy Award-winning film following a 15-year-old undocumented girl pursuing her dream of becoming an artist. MacLaury continues to harness the power of filmmaking to inspire real action and change on the global stage.

Dr. Susan MacLaury, PhD, LSW is the co-founder and Executive Director of the non-profit media company Shine Global which gives voice to underserved children and their families by telling their stories of resilience to raise awareness, promote action, and inspire change.  She executive produced the Academy Award® Winning documentary Inocente, the Emmy Award®-winning, Academy Award®-nominated War/Dance, as well as The Harvest (La Cosecha), 1 Way Up in 3D, The Eagle Huntress, Through Our Eyes: Homefront, and Liyana. She is also the producer of the documentary films The Wrong Light and Virtually Free and co-producer of Tre Maison Dasan. Susan is dually degreed in social work administration and health education and was associate professor of health education at Kean University from 1994 through 2013.

Shine Global is an award-winning non-profit media company that gives voice to children and their families by sharing their stories of resilience to raise awareness, promote action, and inspire change. We produce inspiring films and compelling content about at-risk children. Through tailored distribution and outreach, we connect with our audiences in communities, classrooms, museums, and on capitol hill as part of a powerful engagement campaign to encourage social change.

 

 

Donate to Shine Global

Support our work transforming children’s lives through film

Homefront Panel Discussion on Military Children and Families’ Mental Health April 26, 2022

Homefront Panel Discussion on Military Children and Families’ Mental Health April 26, 2022

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Homefront Panel Discussion on Military Children and Families’ Mental Health April 26, 2022

SHINE GLOBAL HONORED THE MONTH OF THE MILITARY CHILD WITH EXCLUSIVE LIVE PANEL DISCUSSIONS FOR THROUGH OUR EYES: HOMEFRONT

In honor of the Month of the Military Child, Shine Global hosted free panel discussions and virtual viewings of Through Our Eyes: Homefront, our short documentary illustrating the impact of military service through the eyes of three children from across the country. In the second panel hosted on April 26, Dr. Charles Marmar of NYU Langone moderated a discussion with Dr. Carl Castro of USC School of Social Work’s Center for Innovation and Research on Veterans and Military Families, Dr. Tracy Neal-Walden of Chief Clinical Officer of the Cohen Veterans Network, Dr. Amanda Spray Director of the Steven A Cohen Military Families Clinic at NYU Langone, and Dr. Amy Williams Chief Clinical Officer of Headstrong

The panelists discuss both the resilience of military children and families and their unique mental health needs that often are not met.

Select Quotes from the conversation include

  • “As a therapist, can I imagine having this film [Homefront] in my back pocket and sharing it with a family? Absolutely. Right, here are some families that might be struggling and here are some things that they’re doing as a way to kind of normalize, destigmatize, open up a conversation…. It can fast track.” – Amy Williams, Chief Clinical Officer, Headstrong
  • “[Homefront] highlighted a huge gap in our knowledge, a huge gap in our support structures for parents with kids, fairly young children who need an opportunity to explore and be a child.” Carl Castro, USC School of Social Work
  • “I think [Homefront] is a wonderful bridge….and highly recommend it to anyone who wants to build those bridges and get a better understanding of what military families, especially service members who have been wounded, go through. It’s very very powerful.”  – Carl Castro, USC School of Social Work 

In the first panel on April 12th, Homefront director Kristi Jacobson was joined by Headstrong CEO Jim McDonough, Blue Star Families CEO Kathy Roth-Douquet, and Travis Manion Foundation President Ryan Manion for a discussion about the film and the mental well-being of veterans and their families. The conversation was moderated by Former Acting Secretary of the Army Honorable Patrick J. Murphy.  You can watch the April 12 panel with them here.

 

Shine Global is also pleased to offer this free companion discussion guide to the Through Our Eyes: Homefront documentary for viewers to download.  The film is now available to watch on HBOMax as part of the Through Our Eyes documentary series from Sesame Workshop.

In the US, more than three million children live in homes with servicemembers and veterans who rely on caregiver support. In HOMEFRONT, three children of veteran families cope with the emotional impact of having a wounded parent, navigate the unique challenges of visible and invisible injuries sustained during military service, and together journey toward collective healing.

Gabby, Terry, and Luther all have parents who were injured while serving, and each family has found a way to heal the wounds of war. Homefront shows how Gabby (9), a fierce animal lover with a stock of chickens, rabbits, bees, and dogs, loves her family and faces her fears about her Dad’s traumatic brain injury and PTSD via equine therapy. Terry (10), an enthusiastic boy and his parents, Taniki and Brandon, share their experiences and mental health struggles as they work to heal and help each other cope with depression and PTSD through honest conversation and embracing joy. Luther (9) is a charismatic boy who wants to be “like my dad when I grow up.” His father, Joe, a Navy veteran who lost his leg in an IED explosion, struggles through chronic pain to put family first.

*You can download free curricula for Shine Global’s other films here.

Shine Global is an award-winning non-profit media company that gives voice to children and their families by sharing their stories of resilience to raise awareness, promote action, and inspire change. We produce inspiring films and compelling content about at-risk children. Through tailored distribution and outreach, we connect with our audiences in communities, classrooms, museums, and on capitol hill as part of a powerful engagement campaign to encourage social change.

Home Is Somewhere Else Selected For The 2022 Annecy Animation  Film Festival

Home Is Somewhere Else Selected For The 2022 Annecy Animation Film Festival

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Home Is Somewhere Else Selected For The 2022 Annecy Animation Film Festival

Home is Somewhere Else

Innovative Animated Documentary Showcasing the Lives of Three Immigrant Youth and Their Families to Debut at the International Festival

New York, – Home Is Somewhere Else – an animated documentary showcasing three stories of young immigrants, their undocumented families, and the challenges they face – has been selected to compete at the 2022 Annecy Animation Film Festival in the Contrechamps section. As the Supreme Court considers whether the Biden administration can eliminate the Trump-era “Remain in Mexico” policy, Shine Global’s Home is Somewhere Else offers a much-needed yet rare look into the hearts and minds of immigrant youth and their undocumented families, who are caught in the crossroads of our nation’s hotly-contested debates about immigration reform. 

“Oftentimes, our nation’s political leaders are centered in our conversations about immigration but rarely do we hear from the children directly impacted by these debates because of their family’s status, or even their own,” said Susan MacLaury, executive producer of Home Is Somewhere Else and Executive Director of Shine Global. “Children and their undocumented families need and deserve a new migratory system that prioritizes human rights above all else. That’s why we are elated that the Annecy Film Festival has selected our film, and more importantly, has bestowed these incredible children with a platform to tell their stories and inspire real action on the worldstage.”

“Annecy’s Contrechamps section is dedicated to emerging talent and thought-provoking indie films with more risqué narratives, which is a source of pride for us, because making an animated documentary is an arduous process that involves a lot of experimentation,” said directors Carlos Hagerman and Jorge Villalobos. “Being selected is acknowledgment of the high standard of Mexico´s animators; of the work of all the artists on the crew and the diversity and richness of aesthetic and narrative proposals that independent animation studios in Mexico are producing.”

Home Is Somewhere Else will be one of over two hundred films, selected from thousands of films from 93 countries, to compete in the renowned international animation film festival’s feature films category. The film is produced in association with Shine Global – the nonprofit media company behind the Academy Award and Emmy Award winning films Inocente and War/Dance – and directed by Carlos Hagerman and Jorge Villalobos, the visionary founders of Mexico-based animation studio Brinca Taller de Animación.

This innovative, multimedia “animentary” is voiced by its young subjects, whose stories are threaded with vivid “Spanglish” narration by spoken word poet José Eduardo Aguilar “El Deportee.” Home Is Somewhere Else also uniquely employs three distinct visual animation styles to depict each story – enabling audiences to equally see, feel, and understand these childrens’ fears and hopes for a better future.

Home Is Somewhere Else will have it’s Mexican premiere at the Guadalajara International Film Festival.

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About Shine Global

Shine Global is a non-profit media company that gives voice to children and their families by telling their stories of resilience to raise awareness, promote action, and inspire change. We produce inspiring films and compelling content about underserved children. Through tailored distribution and outreach, we connect with our audiences in communities, classrooms, museums, and on Capitol Hill as part of a powerful engagement campaign to encourage social change.

Since its founding in 2005, Shine Global films have won more than 100 major awards, including an Academy Award® for Best Documentary Short Subject for Inocente and an Academy Award®-nomination and two Emmys® for War/Dance. Recent films include the documentary-animation hybrid Liyana, the hit documentary The Eagle Huntress, and Through Our Eyes: Homefront which is available on HBOMax.

About Brinca Taller de Animación

Brinca Taller de Animación is a Mexican animation studio that has ten years experience making animated films and series that focus mainly on children and social issues. We strongly believe animation is a powerful language that allows difficult topics to engage with the audience and inspire change. We have worked for agencies like UNICEF, United Nations Development Programme, Mexican Commission for the Defense and Promotion of Human Rights, American Jewish World Service, International Federation of Human Rights, among others.

Home Is Somewhere Else is Brinca’s first animated feature .