Launched today (17 October) ‘Everything’ is the seventh film produced by a growing partnership of councils and children’s trusts to promote local authority fostering. The ‘Everything’ project is the largest collaboration yet, with participants from Cumbria to Devon and Lancashire to Kent.
“We are committed to giving vulnerable children and young people we care for the best chance to thrive...”
Sue Chandler, KCC Cabinet Member for Integrated Children’s Services said:
“The ‘Everything’ project has given our Kent Fostering service an amazing film that shows the long-term impact fostering can have, with relationships between carers and children lasting well into adulthood.
“All councils need to recruit more foster carers, and by collaborating to produce this emotionally powerful film, we will show people how rewarding and life-changing fostering is.
“The message is the same for all of us – we need more people to step forward and become foster carers. ‘Everything’ will help us to reach more people in our communities and encourage them to find out more about this really rewarding role.
“We are committed to giving vulnerable children and young people we care for the best chance to thrive, which for the vast majority of them is with local fostering families.”
‘Everything’ follows foster carer Mike and his family on a journey through time with two of the children they have looked after, who are now adults. A surprise 60th birthday party for Mike gives Will and Zara a chance to reflect on how being fostered made a difference to their lives, thanking him for everything.
Thanks to footage shot on a genuine old camcorder, we are taken to the 1990s, to see how Will settles into the family. We also jump back to the 2010s, when a young Zara is being taught to play the guitar by Mike, something that comes full circle when she performs a song at the party. Mike’s son Chris is involved throughout, showing the important role the children of foster carers play.
The concluding message of the film is that what you do with your life could forever change someone else’s – encouraging people to foster in order to make that change.
The film was developed with the input and insight of foster carers and people with care experience, was produced by Reel TwentyFive and project managed by public sector media partner CAN/Rachel Brown.
Project Director, Rachel Brown describes the main message of the film: “Many people don’t realise how common it is for relationships made through fostering to last well beyond the ‘official’ caring role. This has a huge impact on the lives of those who have been fostered, giving them stability and security well into adulthood.
“We also wanted to reflect how the children of foster carers make a difference to children when they come into care, helping them to feel part of the family.
“Having over 100 councils taking part in the project, the film will reach a very wide audience, encouraging people to find out more and take the steps towards becoming a foster carer.
“Fostering with your local council or children’s trust means you can better support local children and young people who need a safe and nurturing home where they can grow and thrive.”
The national launch of ‘Everything’ will be held at the Everyman cinema in Birmingham on 17th October and council fostering services involved in the project will also be holding local launches around the country.
Sarah Thomas, chief executive of the Fostering Network says: "The Fostering Network has been proud to support the collaborative film projects since 'Giants' in 2017. It's great to see local authority fostering services pooling resources to produce another amazing film. 'Everything' will help to amplify their message about the chronic shortage of fostering households, encouraging more people to come forward and foster.
One of the main characters in the film, Chris, shows how important other family members are when it comes to fostering. This is something we champion throughout October, which is Children of Foster Carer's Month."
‘Everything’ is the latest in a series of film collaborations that started in 2017 with ‘Giants’, which was supported by a small number of local authorities in the midlands and has now grown into a national project across England, reflecting the need to recruit more foster carers.
To view the ‘Everything’ film visit https://youtu.be/el-3K8N8mD0
If you’ve been inspired by Mike, Will, Zara and Chris' stories and would like to find out more about becoming a foster carer, please call us on 03000 420 002, send us an email at kentfostering@kent.gov.uk or visit our website page www.kentfostering.co.uk.
‘Everything’ has been produced by the ReelTwentyFive film production company, and project managed by public sector media partner CAN and Rachel Brown. Find out more about the project: https://fosterwithyourcouncil.uk/join-film-project/
The Fostering Network is the UK’s leading fostering charity and membership organisation, bringing together everyone who is involved in the lives of fostered children to make foster care the very best it can be: https://www.thefosteringnetwork.org.uk/
Children of Foster Carers Month runs every October, organised annually by the Fostering Network to celebrate the vital contribution the children of foster carers make to foster care: https://www.thefosteringnetwork.org.uk/get-involved/championing-fostering/children-of-foster-carers-month
Over 100 local authorities and children’s trusts are represented in the ‘Everything’ film project.
The full list of project partners is:
Achieving For Children (consortium of Kingston, Richmond, and Windsor & Maidenhead councils)
Barnet
Bath & North East Somerset
Birmingham Children's Trust
Blackburn With Darwen
Blackpool
Bracknell Forest
Bradford Children and Families Trust
Brent
Brighton & Hove
Bromley
Buckinghamshire
Calderdale
Cambridgeshire
Camden
Cheshire East
Cheshire West & Chester
Coventry
Croydon
Cumberland
Derby City
Derbyshire
Devon
Doncaster
Dorset
Dudley
Ealing
East Riding
East Sussex
Essex
Fostering Shared Services (consortium of Hammersmith & Fulham, Kensington & Chelsea, and Westminster councils)
Gateshead
Gloucestershire
Halton
Hampshire
Haringey
Harrow
Herefordshire
Hertfordshire
Hillingdon
Hounslow
Hull
Isle Of Wight
Kent
Knowsley
Lancashire
Leeds
Leicester City
Liverpool
Luton
Medway
Merton
Milton Keynes
Norfolk
North Lincolnshire
North Somerset
North Yorkshire
Northamptonshire Children's Trust
Northumberland
Nottingham City
Nottinghamshire
Oldham
Oxfordshire
Peterborough
Plymouth
Portsmouth
Reading (Brighter Futures For Children)
Rotherham
Rutland
Sandwell Children's Trust
Sefton
Sheffield
Slough
South Gloucestershire
South Tyneside
Southampton
Southend-on-Sea
St Helens
Staffordshire
Stockport
Suffolk
Surrey
Sutton
Swindon
Telford & Wrekin
Thurrock
Torbay
Trafford
Wakefield
Walsall
Warrington
Warwickshire
West Berkshire
West Sussex
Westmorland & Furness
Wigan
Wiltshire
Wirral
Wokingham
Wolverhampton
Worcestershire Children First
York