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ALL THAT'S LEFT OF YOU (2025) + Q&A

  • Telegraph Hill Centre Pepys Road SE14 5TY United Kingdom (map)
palestine

Tickets
Pay What You Can*

Doors 6.00 PM
Film 6.30 PM
Guest Speaker 9.10 PM

The Telegraph Hill Centre
Narthex
Pepys Road
SE14 5TY


  • ALL THAT’S LEFT OF YOU

  • dir. Cherien Dabis

  • starring. Cherien Dabis, Saleh Bakri, Adam Bakri

  • country. Germany, Cyprus, Palestine, Jordan, Greece, Qatar, Kingdom of Saudi Arabia

  • year. 2025

  • runtime. 145 MINS

  • rating. 12A

  • Executively produced by Javier Bardem and Mark Ruffalo

In the Occupied West Bank of the 1980s, a Palestinian teenager is swept into a protest that changes the course of his family's life. Reeling from its aftermath, his mother, Hanan, shares the story that led them to that fateful moment. Spanning seven decades, this epic drama traces the hopes and heartaches of one uprooted family, revealing not only the scars of displacement, but the unbreakable spirit of survival.

Content Advice: This film contains depictions of military violence and includes themes of forced displacement, traumatic incidents and loss.

Meet Our Panellists

  • Saeed Taji Farouky @cinemasaeed: a filmmaker, radical educator, and activist. He is co-founder of Radical Film School, a free film programme for people from marginalised backgrounds interested in keeping the tradition of radical filmmaking alive, and a member of the Palestine Film Institute dedicated to promoting and preserving Palestinian cinema as an integral part of Palestinian resistance and resilience.

  • Lubna Speitan: British-Palestinian contemporary artist, long-standing human rights campaigner, with family in both Gaza and the West Bank. Alongside her artistic practice, she has a deep interest in writing, poetry, music, philosophy, ethics, psychology, and anthropology. Her work is shaped by a lifelong commitment to political activism, environmentalism, and advocating for the rights of minorities and marginalized communities.

All That’s Left of You has accomplished something rare. It makes history feel not like a lesson, but like a family heirloom passed down under duress. Language survives. Love survives. Ritual survives. But everything does so in reduced form, diminished not by fate but by policy, power, and the daily insistence that Palestinians prove their right to exist in the most basic ways. It does not argue this, it shows it, patiently, painfully, and with a tragic clarity that lingers long after the final image fades.” - eyeforfilm

It reminds us that even in the face of unimaginable loss, our way forward lies in empathy, in finding meaning in grief, and in choosing humanity over vengeance
— Mark Ruffalo / Deadline