Activism

Why We Protest
Activism

Why We Protest

Hong Kong — Hong Kong has seen its biggest street demonstrations in a decade in a potential prelude to an Occupy protest in the former British colony's city centre. Huck asks the protesters why they are taking to the streets.

Written by: Richie Benson

Sheffield Doc/Fest
Film

Sheffield Doc/Fest

Field Notes Part II: State of the Nation — In Huck's latest roundup of new documentaries from Sheffield Doc/Fest, we focus on homegrown stories from the UK.

Written by: Alex King

Huck's Best of the Week
Culture

Huck's Best of the Week

Stories from the Waterfront — Three stories of change and creativity from the shoreline.

Written by: HUCK HQ

Thomas Castets
Why I do what I do

Thomas Castets

Out in the Line-up — Some surfers may be gay. Deal with it.

Written by: Michael Fordham

Leave to Remain
Why I do what I do

Leave to Remain

Director Q&A — Director Bruce Goodison talks to Huck about turning the experiences of child asylum seekers into compelling drama.

Written by: Alex King

Shamsia Hassani
Why I do what I do

Shamsia Hassani

Women on Walls — Afghanistan’s only female street artist is on a solo quest for women’s equality.

Written by: Ricardo Miguel Vieira

Positive Force
Activism

Positive Force

DC Punk Activism — “The destructive urge is also a creative urge!” Robin Bell's new documentary about DC punk activist group Positive Force reveals the radical possibilities of a subculture.

Written by: Shelley Jones

Billy Bragg returns to Barking, retracing the steps of his youth
Film

Billy Bragg returns to Barking, retracing the steps of his youth

Streets I Ran — Musician and activist Billy Bragg returns to his childhood streets of Barking, Essex.

Written by: HUCK HQ

We Are Many
Why I do what I do

We Are Many

Field Notes from Sheffield Doc/Fest — Amir Amirani's incredible documentary We Are Many looks at the events and repercussions of the global anti-Iraq war protests in 2003.

Written by: Alex King

Tiananmen: 25 Years On
Activism

Tiananmen: 25 Years On

The Power of a Picture — Dissident artist Ai Weiwei and iconic photojournalist Jeff Widener make us remember the atrocities of the Tiananmen Square Massacre, twenty-five years on.

Written by: Shelley Jones

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