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The fifth annual United We Heal Film Festival brought a sold-out Juneteenth celebration to Underground Arts, showcasing 11 Philadelphia-area filmmakers and a lineup of films spanning documentary storytelling to reimagined Black history.
Executive director Ebony Roberts started United We Heal after directing her own film, which she called a love letter to the Black community during 2020’s racial unrest.
“The film was dedicated to unifying our community. I took it on the film festival run and I quickly realized that our films, Black and brown filmmakers, need a platform.” Roberts said.
Shuja Moore, director of “Changing Course,” won the judge’s selection for Best in Show. The documentary short explores the Philadelphia District Attorney’s Office’s work with youth diversion initiatives and their impact on young people.
Moore, who grew up in West Philadelphia, said he uses community voices to foster conversations about incarceration.
“We have a district attorney that is implementing [diversion programs],” he said. “But that is not the story that is being told. The more we educate and invest in people, the more safe we are.”
The audience’s vote for Best in Show was David Dylan Thomas’ “White Meat: Appetizer.”
The premise is simple: “Underneath Washington Square Park in Philly are the bodies of hundreds of enslaved people. What if one night they all came back from the dead as zombies, but they only ate white people?”
The film draws inspiration from the park’s real history as a designated burial ground for African Americans in the late 18th and early 19th centuries.
“A lot of my horror is based on taking things that have actually happened to Black people and recontextualizing it,” Thomas said. “It is just a way to invite people to deal with some of these uncomfortable issues through the lens of horror.”
Thomas said he wanted to preserve the history and context of how serious the issue is, along with including the names of the enslaved people who were owned by former U.S. presidents while living in Philadelphia.
“While we were working, the president of the United States decided to declare war on Black history, and I take that personally,” he said.









