
Here Are The Incredible Disability-Led Films In Sydney Film Fest’s 2026 Screenability Program
The Sydney Film Festival has unveiled its 2026 Screenability and Family programs, spotlighting eight films that are pushing storytelling forward, from eye-opening disability-led filmmaking to imaginative adventures for younger audiences.
Screenability, the Festival’s dedicated program for films by and about people living with disabilities, marks its tenth year. Over the past decade, it has carved out vital space for stories that are often sidelined in mainstream cinema.
“Screenability is about opening the screen up, not just to new stories, but to the people telling them,” says SFF Director Nashen Moodley.
“And with our Family films, it’s pure cinema joy. Big ideas, big emotions, and the kind of stories that hook you early and stay with you.”
Leading this year’s announcement is Screenability’s trio of feature films, each offering a mix of disability storytelling shaped by heart, humour, and real emotional weight.
Among them is Retreat, the feature debut of British Deaf filmmaker Ted Evans, whose work has long centred on Deaf culture and visual storytelling. Known for his award-winning short, The End, Evan directs an all-Deaf cast in the psychological thriller. The film follows a brooding drama about Eva, a young woman seeking connection within an isolated Deaf community, only to discover the cracks beneath its utopian surface.
Also screening is Joybubbles, the Sundance‑selected debut documentary from Rachael J. Morrison, produced by Sarah Winshall (notably worked on I Saw the TV Glow). The film examines the extraordinary life of Josef Carl Engressia Jr., who was born blind, yet gifted with perfect pitch. His remarkable sensitivity to pitch later fueled his pioneering work as a phone‑phreak and early hacker, using sound as his primary tool.
Rounding out the three features is You Look Fine, an award‑winning documentary from comedian and filmmaker J. Snow. Blending humour with raw honesty, Snow documents offers a rare first-person perspective by bringing the camera to hospital rooms and across his treatment with sickle cell disease. Through his intimate storytelling, Snow captures the realities of chronic illness, medical dismissal, and resilience, earning both the Grand Jury Prize and Audience Award at Slamdance.
These features will be accompanied by equally compelling shorts.
When You Hear Hoofbeats, a pointed look at medical gaslighting. Sarsaparilla, a playful Western where rivalry transforms into line dancing. And Trapeze, Jeremy Lowrenčev’s movement-led exploration of Deaf identity and ancestral connection.
Alongside Screenability, the Festival’s Family Films program offers two sweeping tales for all audiences. The Last Whale Singer, a Zurich Film Festival selection that follows a young humpback whale who must find his voice to save the ocean. As well as The Desert Child by Gilles de Maistre, which retells the astonishing true story of Hadara, a boy who grew up among ostriches in the Sahara, his life retold through a teenage writer uncovering her grandfather’s past.
Tickets to Screenability and Family Films, along with the rest of the Sydney Film Festival program, are on sale now at sff.org.au. FlexiPasses and subscriptions are also available.




Leave a Reply