Still from All This Victory When Solid Turns To Dust, Or A Note On Liquidity From Palestine
Parallel Time
screening of three short films + Q&A with Diala Ayesh | total Running time: 75m | book ticketsHow do we tell the stories of our prisoners? Across essay film, fiction, and documentary, this programme explores storytelling as a form of resistance against the silencing and isolation imposed by incarceration.
Drawing from Walid Daqqa’s notion of parallel time—the suspended temporality imposed by colonial imprisonment, where prisoners are severed from the linear time of the outside world—the films reveal prison not only as a site of confinement, but as a space where culture, thought, and connection continue to exist. In the context of ongoing struggles around political imprisonment, including the Filton 25 case here in the UK, the programme also asks how narratives of prisoners are constructed, challenged, and reclaimed.
Bonboné
It is thought that wars and conflicts conquer the essence of body and soul, like the heaving of waves on a rough sea. An imprisoned Palestinian from the resistance forces is serving his time in an Israeli jail. Yearning to see his offspring, he contrives a plot with the help of his spouse. Will his attempt pan out as planned?
Director: Rakan Mayasi
year of release: 2017
place of production: Lebanon
AGE rating: 15+
original languages: englishPartition
Partition fuses archival footage from the British occupation of Palestine with audio recorded of Palestinian refugees in Lebanon. Silent films gathered in imperial collections hold histories that have barely been told. Recovering Palestinian presence through story, voice and song, unraveling colonial pasts through soundscapes of the precarious present, Partition is a meditation on what bodies remember and empires forget.
director: Diana Allan
year of release: 2017
place of production: Palestine, Lebanon
Original Language: arabic (English subtitles)
Age rating: 16+Walid Daqqa: A Parallel Life
This is the story of Walid Daqqa, one of the longest-serving Palestinian prisoners in Israeli jails, told by his immediate family and in voice recordings he made behind bars. From a sharp-minded boy in 1948 Palestine to a clandestine PFLP organiser sentenced to life imprisonment, Daqqa turns his cell into a classroom, a think tank and, eventually, a wedding venue when he marries Sanaa Salama inside Ashkelon prison.
Through intimate testimonies from family, former prisoners and his lawyer, the film explores Walid’s idea of “parallel time” – living both under “tonnes of concrete” and beyond the walls. It recounts the smuggling of his sperm, the birth of his daughter, Milad, and his powerful message to her: hate oppression, not people. As cancer consumes him and Israel refuses his release, Milad’s final chant, “Freedom for our prisoners. For my father”, echoes a struggle that outlives Walid Daqqa’s life.
director: Al Jazeera
year of release: 2025
place of production: qatar, Palestine
Original Language: arabic (English subtitles)
Age rating: 15+Events are ticketed but no one will be turned away for lack of funds. Please reach out.
