PassesAccessibility
2026
(Philadelphia Premiere)Experimental

Let Them Be Seen

A black-and-white film still from Let Them Be Seen shows a collection of cattle grazing in a field of tall grass in South Africa. In the foreground, there’s an asphalt road. In the background, there’s rolling mountains and a mostly clear sky.

Let Them Be Seen is an absurdist South African film that employs documentary as a language rather than a category, deliberately blurring the line between fiction and reality while rethinking form and narrative structure. Set in Sterkspruit, a town positioned at the intersection of three borders, the film unfolds within a region long indoctrinated by missionary influence, where older forms of faith gradually give way to new systems of belief, ritual and communion.

Rather than focusing on the headlines often associated with South Africa, inequality, violence, unemployment and social fragmentation, the film turns toward presence and the quotidian. It observes how people endure these conditions through humor, ritual, performance and spiritual nearness. The church remains a shadowed center within the town, yet over time, taverns and informal gathering spaces begin to inherit a similar devotional weight. Into this landscape arrives the camera, not as an instrument of salvation but as a witness. Through the act of being seen, moments of candor, absurdity and vulnerability begin to surface.

The film was intentionally shot primarily on mobile phones, digital video and occasionally digital single-lens reflex in order to mirror the texture of a place suspended between quiet and cacophony. Drawing from influences as varied as Hale County This Morning, This Evening; August 32nd on Earth; Courage the Cowardly Dog; Kendrick Lamar’s good kid, m.A.A.d city; and Santu Mofokeng’s photographic series Chasing Shadows, the work moves through dreamlike and religious imagery to explore visibility, pain and endurance.

At its center, Let Them Be Seen asks how people wish to be perceived, what performance conceals, and what remains when those performances fall away. It offers no clear answers, only the subtlety and possibility of being witnessed.

Tickets

In Person

Thursday, August 61:30PM EDTThe Wilma Theater
Virtual Screening →

TRAILER

Filmmaker

Nolitha Refilwe Mkulisi

Director

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