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23rd April 2021
Limitless Potential
With a visual style that blurs commercial aesthetics, lyrical storytelling and pure documentary, interdisciplinary filmmaker and producer Eloise King is part of a new wave of creative polymaths flowing between different spaces with ease. From institutional and structural racism, cultural turning-points, the Black liberation movement and gender violence against women, her work seeks to centre marginalised perspectives with authenticity and empathy. With the release of her latest ad for Barbie – an uplifting paean to the potential of young Black girls fronted by Clara Amfo – she reflects on why the next generation needs space to simply be themselves.

 

Eloise King

 

What was your childhood like? Were you interested in film from a young age?

 

I grew up as the only girl in a family of 11 boys – brothers and cousins. I rode a BMX, I had a gymnastics scholarship, and played Peter Pan in the school play. I was a voracious reader, story writer and I directed many Barbie scenarios. Looking back, I was allowed to fearlessly explore my interests.  By 14, I was absorbing every documentary I could – Kim Longinotto, Brian Hills ‘Feltham Sings’ stood out – when I gleaned that films offer intimate windows to the world. When I told my teacher, she responded that being a filmmaker was too competitive so I should think of something else…

 

Milk Honey Bees / Barbie, Raise Your Voice

 

How has your background in journalism and TV – plus your role as a former global executive producing at VICE and i-D – gone on to inform your approach as a director and the types of projects you’re drawn to?  

 

I am an interdisciplinary filmmaker by virtue of all of the spaces I inhabit and sources of information I am drawn to. I think I am naturally observant or analytical, which lends itself to a dynamic understanding of visual language, story and character. That said, I’m still growing and experimenting with new ways to fuse my influences, surrealism and humour into my work as there’s a danger of being too earnest. I want to make projects that force me to learn something new and provoke creative growth.

 

You’re dedicated to working with intersectional crews on your films – why is this important to you and how could more directors benefit from having a diverse team of black, people of colour, white and queer and non-binary, men and women?

 

As filmmakers we build worlds, and my crews reflect the world I live in. A friend said to me recently: “Privilege is inversely proportional to insight. I can see you but you can’t see me.” That chimes with me deeply as a Black queer woman director.

 

CoppaFeel, Grab Life by the Boobs

 

Your aesthetic feels authentic and natural, and your spots for CoppaFeel! and Nike Women in particular sing with body confidence: how do you go about creating an atmosphere of authenticity and that allows your cast to relax and be themselves in these types of shoots?

 

I intuitively tap into people’s energy and rhythms – but it’s an exchange. I’m curious, so I ask lots of questions; being a documentary filmmaker has definitely helped me refine this, but I always want to have enough room to respond to the person in front of me, to make them feel safe enough to show themselves.

 

Female empowerment and potential is clearly a theme that’s very close to your heart and it’s encapsulated in your latest film for Barbie. What was the brief and how closely did you work with Clara Amfo and London grassroots organisation Milk HoneyBees to bring the concept to life?

 

The brief was to create a piece marking Clara’s appointment as a Barbie role model and raise awareness of Milk HoneyBees’ core mission; to empower Black girls. It made me think about Breonna Taylor, Shukri Abdi and the response to Meghan Thee Stallion being shot, as well as the way 7-year-old Wynta-Amor [Rogers] at a [Black Lives Matter] protest in Merrick went viral. What would it look like for Black girls to be uplifted and protected in society?

 

Right away, I envisaged a playful, DIY, Charlie’s Angels style call-and-response film that put the girls’ POV at the heart of the film – starting with Black sisterhood as Ebineheta invites Clara to work together with her on the mission. The film explores how confidence is expressed in a variety of ways. There is a tendency towards the adultification of Black girls and it’s deadly. Black girls aren’t adults, they shouldn’t have to fight against their own oppression or be strong all the time. The greatest gift we can give the next generation is a limitless space to imagine, play and heal, to be themselves – and Clara’s central narration offers this from the heart.

 

Milk Honey Bees / Barbie, Raise Your Voice

 

And what are your favourite aspects of the finished film?

 

I love that it’s honest. This is a commercial I would have liked to have seen growing up. Watching Iris, Riley-Ann, Kennedy and Bailey and Adduni come into their own: play instruments, paint, dance, direct and experiment while encouraging in whatever makes them happy. Seeing how proud they are of themselves and how it will make other Black girls feel is everything – it’s positively good for the soul.

 

As a director whose work examines institutional and cultural turning-points and the tensions of ‘progress’, how have the events of the past year – the Black Lives Matter movement and the exposure of institutional racism; the Sarah Everard case, violence against women and rape culture in schools – affected your worldview and sparked inspiration for stories you want to tell?

 

Reflecting on my body of work in the past 10 years, whether it’s been the Nike ad, a documentary about kids incarcerated as adults in the US, commissioning films about Sisters Uncut and Yarls Wood protests, fashion profiles or scrutinizing female stigmas for Gurls Talk with Adwoa Aboah – and now my film – my work has made so many comments on the tensions of ‘progress’.

I’ve addressed institutional and structural racism, cultural turning-points, the Black liberation movement and gender violence against women, employing various forms, formats and mediums and making sure those stories centring marginalised perspectives are seen and heard. Personally, I don’t make work to prove anyone else wrong, or speak truth to power or prove anyone’s humanity – I am proof enough. I am inspired by people and want to create authentic complex experiences with them, to reflect people as they see themselves and elevate it – evoking empathy through film.

 

What are you working on at the moment?

I’m currently in production on my debut feature documentary supported by Field of Vision, BFI/Doc Society, Firelight Media and Wellcome Trust, and I am developing a fiction feature.

 

Interview by Selena Schleh

PRETTYBIRD UK website

Credits
Milk & Honey / Barbie, Limitless Potential Production Company: PRETTYBIRD Co-Founder UK/ Exec Producer: Juliette Larthe Director and Creative: Eloise King Writer: Laura Kirwan-Ashman Head of New Business: Mia Powell Producer: Paulette Caletti Production Manager: Benji Landman Production: Yazz Anderson-Moore 1st Assistant Director: Steven Olugbenga Eniraiyetan 2nd AD Jason Osborne Director of Photography: Joel Honeywell Stylist: Leah Abbott Hair Stylist: Isaac Poleon Hair Stylist Assistant: Tyeesha Taylor-Scott MUA: Sogol Razi Art Direction: Joseph Bond Art Direction: Jade Adeyemi Location Manager: Bart O Sullivan 1st AC: Hopi Demattio 2nd AC James Malamatinas Sound Recordist: John Thorpe Gaffer: Bernie Prentice Electrician: Mike Casserly Camera Trainee: James Groves DIT: Mark Koslowski Art Department Assistant: Sasa Thompson   Casting: Selma Nicholls Founder & Casting Director Looks Like Me Casting   Editor: Anne Perri Music: Asriel Hayes accompanied by Madison Dorsett and Henry Gross Edit Assistant: Miles Watson Edit Producer: Ben Tomlin Editors: Work Editorial   Head of Colour: Luke Morrison Post Producer: Oliver Whitworth, Claudia Carmichael Online Editor & Post House: Electric Theatre Collective Sound Designer: Chad Raymond     Nike, We’ve Always Done It Director: Eloise King @_elloweezee_ Director of Photography: Amelia Hazlerigg @ameliahazlerigg Production Company: PRETTYBIRD UK @prettybirdpic Co-Founder UK/Exec Producer: Juliette Larthe @juliette_larthe Head of Production: Hannah May @hannahannahmay Producer: Hannah Bellil @hannahbellil Production Assistant: Chris Murdoch @chrisraymurdoch 1 st Assistant Director: Will Jasper @jasper2052 Movie Operator: Ricky Patel @rickymundo_ Production Designer: Joseph Bond @josephbondstudio Stylist: Theo White @theowhitewine Makeup Artist: Victoria Martin @victoriamartinmakeup Hair Stylist: Isaac Poleon @issacvpoleon Edit House: Work Editorial @workeditorial Offline Editor: Anne Perri @anne_perri Original music written and produced by:Asriel Hayes @a5ri3l Poem written and spoken by: Abondance Matanda @abondance_ Colour House: Electric Theatre Collective @electric.theatre.collective Colourist: Luke Morrison @thehux Focus Puller: Louise Murphy Clapper Loader: Abigayle Blacow Gaffer: Edel Gardner @edelgardner Electrician: Cleo Vogler, Max Milner Stylist’s Assistant: Rashida Taylor Makeup Assistant: Daisy Moore Hair Assistant: Omar Majid Art Department Assistant: Bernice Mulenga Offline Editor Assistant: Bea Icke @beaicke Offline Producer: Elle McNaughtan Colour Producer: Oliver Whitworth Sound House: Wave @wavestudios_ Sound Designer: Martin Leitner @martyleitner Sound Post Producer: Beth Tomblin