DREAMERS
DREAMERS
Tickets:
Wednesday
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12.11.2025
22:15, Kino Apollo Sala Kameralna
Saturday
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15.11.2025
15:00, Kino Apollo Sala Kameralna
A personal feature debut centred on a Nigerian woman awaiting an asylum decision in an English detention centre. Isio finds solace and love in Farah, and together they must choose: to conform and trust in the bureaucracy of asylum, or to carve out their own path to freedom.
Joy Gharoro-Akpojotor’s dreamlike feature tackles Britain’s shameful anti-immigration policies. From the very beginning of her film career, Joy has championed Black, queer and female voices through her company, Joi Productions. After 11 years of production experience, she directed the short film FOR LOVE, nominated for the 2021 BFI London Film Festival award. With the support of BBC Film, she made DREAMERS, a very personal feature debut about a Nigerian woman awaiting an asylum decision in the UK. Her film competed for the queer Teddy Award at this year's Berlinale.
Joy transports the audience to an English deportation centre, where Isio (Ronkẹ Adékoluẹjo), a young lesbian unable to live in accordance with her sexuality in Nigeria, ends up. Although the staff seem polite, her room is cosy, and she’s even offered art classes, it soon becomes clear that this is all a fake. The illusion of care and hope quickly evaporates as Isio realises she’s effectively imprisoned in a place where desperate women immigrants form gangs, endure violence and humiliation, and live under constant surveillance - with those who resist being sent into solitary confinement.
Isio finds solace in Farah (Ann Akinjirin), who teaches her how to appear powerless and not to let anyone take away her joy of life and her belief that she does not deserve love. A passionate romance blossoms between the women, forcing them to make a decision: conform and trust the legal asylum process that is bleeding them dry of hope, or create their own escape route.
“Freedom begins in the mind,” says one of the characters, like a manifesto that guides the director in her narrative. Gharoro-Akpojotor uses luminous lighting and dreamlike imagery to explore the subconscious realms of fear and desire. At the same time, her poetic approach humanises the migrant experience, portraying it as a polyphony of stories - the diverse stories of women fleeing the horror of reality, immersed in different cultural contexts.
Text: Michał Sołtysek
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