"Somewhere Better" - a powerful new film about a Czech Romany family in Britain
Friday saw the international press premiere in Prague of an extraordinary film. "Somewhere Better", a co-production between Czech Television and the BBC, looks at one of the many Czech Romany families that have applied for asylum in Britain. This is a much-discussed theme, but the film by documentary-maker Mira Erdevicki takes an unusual path, and is special in more ways than one. David Vaughan was at the premiere.
"It's like a feature film really. I always know what I'm going to shoot and I always know what will happen, because I make a terrific amount of research and I'm very close to the family. I prepare the camera in a position to film dialogue, and because of that they don't really play on the camera because I'm there like a camera, but they play on my like I'm really part of the family. So you have these extraordinary intimate situations. It's a sad thing to say, but I was lucky, because when I started the film the mother died, so immediately the story was absolutely focusing on that. This death just changed absolutely my view on the subject, because now it's not just a story about do I have papers or not, but it is: am I going to live here for ever? What's going to happen?"
In the opening sequence we see Ester Kovacova buried in the foreign soil of London's Hackney Cemetery. Suddenly the family faces a deep crisis of identity. Where do they belong? Is home in Britain, in the Czech Republic, or in their Romany identity itself? Of course there no simple answers and Erdevicki makes no attempt to pretend that there are. "Somewhere Better" will be shown in its English version in Britain on BBC 4 in the spring, and there will be further opportunities to see it in both Europe and North America when it is released for cinema screening later this year.