On the set of âRocksâ: âWe wanted to build this film with young peopleâ
A group of teenage east Londoners are doing pirouettes together across the roof of Sulkin House, a block of flats in Bethnal Green. Their euphoria quickly mutates into improvised ballroom poses, then hip-swinging moves all across the rooftop. Every single one of them is completely unbridled, with energy levels that itâs tiring even to envy.Â
Itâs the final day of shooting on Rocks, a unique movie collaboration overseen by director Sarah Gavron (Suffragette). For the next set-up, sheâs soon shepherding her young cast from one side of the rooftop to the other to get the best shot. The girls are calling out each characterâs name in turn, shrieking with laughter. Shouts of âOh, whatever!â and âlive in the moment!â echo out across the rooftops, drowning out passing sirens, the hum of traffic, even the rumble of the Overground through Bethnal Green.
(From left to right) Ruby Stokes, Anastasia Dymitrow, Bukky Bakray, Kosar AliRocks tells the story of a teenage British-Nigerian girl (played by Hackney local Bukky Bakray, aged 15 at time of filming), who wakes up one morning to find that her mother has left her and her younger brother Emmanuel (Dâangelou Osei Kissiedu) to live alone. She attempts to hide this fact from social services and her friends alike, and ends up carrying a burden beyond her years.Â
With the Cityâs financial district in the distance and the late summer sun beating down, Gavronâs talented young cast (Bakray, who plays Rocks, is joined by fellow east Londoners Kos