The Good Grief Project
The Good Grief Project aims to help bereaved parents and siblings to understand grief as a creative and active process.
The Good Grief Project aims to help bereaved parents and siblings to understand grief as a creative and active process.
Cruse Bereavement help people through one of the most painful times in life – with bereavement support, information and campaigning.
The Centre for the Art of Dying Well at St Mary’s University. Rethinking the art of accompaniment at the end of life. Public engagement, policy, research – death, dying and bereavement.
Film can open up new worlds or it can project our own onto the silver screen. It can explore difficult themes, whether introducing us to the issues for the first time as a child, or by developing our understanding in later teenage years. From classic animations and folktales through to kitchen sink dramas and fantastical … More
The impact of losing someone is tricky to adequately convey on screen, but 3 recent films make mourning feel visceral.
Find out more about National Grief Awareness Week and how to get involved.
National Grief Awareness Week is an annual event led by the Good Grief Trust. This year it takes place from 2nd to 8th December 2024 and is all about shining a light on people, places, and projects that help people through some of the most difficult times in their lives.
It is dedicated to raising awareness about grief, supporting people who are grieving, and promoting a better understanding of the grieving process.
It acknowledges that grief is a natural response to loss and encourages empathy and compassion for people who are grieving, aiming to break the stigma surrounding this challenging part of human experience.
National Grief Awareness Week is a dedicated time for people, organisations and communities to come together in a meaningful way to support those who are grieving and work towards breaking down the barriers surrounding grief. Here are some ways to get involved:
Grief Awareness Week shines a light on experiences of grief, a universal but deeply personal experience. Film and cinema can provide opportunities to raise awareness, support education and broaden understanding about grief, and ignite important discussions about how we look after each other. Find some highlighted films on this page, along with resources to support the wellbeing of cinema audiences.
We have collated some guides to help you to increase and improve access for disabled, d/Deaf and neurodivergent people in your organisations, whether that be for audiences at the cinema or for employees.
Cinemas across the country currently offer specific accessible screenings, such as subtitled, audio described, BSL interpreted, relaxed environment, autism-friendly, and/or dementia-friendly screenings.
Your Local Cinema lists many subtitled and audio-described screenings
Accessible Screenings UK also list autism-friendly, subtitled and audio-described screenings
Social Value Lab has worked with Regional Screen Scotland to produce a new online ‘toolkit’ to help local cinemas across the UK to make the case for how much they matter to their communities, by measuring and understanding their social impacts.
FWD-Doc in association with Doc Society supported by Netflix presents: A Toolkit for Inclusion & Accessibility: Changing the Narrative of Disability in Documentary Film