Sweetshop’s entertainment division, Sweetshop & Green Productions launched in September last year to “produce films and TV projects that are artistically exciting, but produced as a commercially viable product, with identified audiences and exported to the world.”Its first feature film certainly fits the bill. Sweetshop & Green has entered into a partnership with Aurora Films and Hoodlum Entertainment to develop and produce the film of Behrouz Boochani’s controversial book, No Friend But The Mountains: Writing from Manus Prison.
Behrouz Boochani is a Kurdish Iranian journalist, author and poet who fled Iran in 2012 after the newspaper he co-founded was raided by the Iranian government. As a refugee, he attempted to travel to Australia by boat from Indonesia to seek asylum, but was intercepted and imprisoned on an Australian-run offshore processing camp on Papua New Guinea’s Manus Island. Boochani would spend almost seven years confined in offshore detention. No Friend But The Mountains is the account of his harrowing experience.
The Guardian journalist, Omid Tofighian, describes the book as, “a scathing critique of domination and oppression…a cacophony that evokes the harsh physical reality, uncertainty and the incessant abuses practised in Manus Island prison – [he] deconstructs the established principles of genres as he employs them, thus positioning his book as an anti-genre.”
The book was arduously typed out on a contraband phone via WhatsApp in Farsi and translated by Omid Tofighian, all in defiance of the system detaining him. It was dangerous work. It is an international bestseller and is sold in 19 countries.
Boochani said that writing helped him to survive. “I could keep my identity and keep my humanity. This system is designed to take our identity, designed to reduce us to numbers.” The book is a testament to his resilience.
No Friend But The Mountains: Writing from Manus Prison won Australia’s top literary award in 2019, the Victorian Prize for Literature, while Boochani remained detained on Manus Island, and ironically, he accepted the award via phone link. It also won the Victorian Premier’s Prize for Non-fiction, the Special Award in the New South Wales Premier’s Literary Awards, the Australian Book Industry Awards (ABIA) for General non-fiction book of the year and the Australian National Biography Award.
The feature film project was initiated by writer & producer, Ákos Armont, and producer, Antony Waddington, for Aurora Films and is intended to be shot primarily in Australia, with production slated for mid-2021.
Gal Greenspan, managing director at Sweetshop & Green, commented, “Behrouz’s story is highly important and deeply moving. It is our goal to produce the film as an international co-production and share it with as many people around the world as possible.”
Antony Waddington, senior producer at Aurora Films, stated, “Mountains is a defining tale for our time: not just of Australia, but how the world deals with refugees. Funny at times, it’s overwhelmingly a story of triumph over despair.”
Nathan Mayfield, executive producer and co-founder, Hoodlum Entertainment, added, “This is an incredible story about courage, the power of one man’s resistance and of the written word to give us hope. Hoodlum are proud to partner with Aurora Films and Sweetshop & Green and look forward to bringing each of our strengths in to bear in realising this extraordinary story for the screen.”