Trinidad+Tobago Film Festival celebrates 20 years with successful UK launch

To mark two decades of elevating Caribbean cinematic storytelling, the Trinidad+Tobago Film Festival (TTFF) has launched its first UK-based screening initiative, *Crossroads: Where Caribbean Cinema Meets the UK*, with a sold-out opening event in Hertford. The launch centered on the UK premiere of *Queen of Soca*, held in partnership with local arts venue BEAM, and kicked off a multi-venue regional tour running through mid-June.

Founded in 2005, TTFF has spent 20 years centered on a core mission: amplifying Caribbean filmmakers, centering authentic regional narratives, and building a global audience for work from the Caribbean and its diaspora. This year’s anniversary programming expands that mission beyond the festival’s Trinidad and Tobago base, forging new cross-continental cultural connections between Caribbean creators and UK-based audiences, particularly members of the large Caribbean diaspora across the United Kingdom.

TTFF Director Mariel Brown framed the sold-out opening as a perfect reflection of the festival’s 20th anniversary vision. “As we mark two decades of TTFF, we are proud to celebrate not only the films and filmmakers that have shaped Caribbean cinema, but also the connections, audiences and cultural spaces that will sustain it into the future,” Brown shared in remarks after the event. “The UK premiere of *Queen of Soca* was everything I hoped *Crossroads* could be, full of heart, Caribbean diaspora spirit and a strong sense of community and connection through film.”

The opening night gathering drew a diverse crowd spanning Caribbean diaspora community members, independent film lovers, cultural sector leaders, and press, who gathered for a fully immersive cultural experience before the screening. Attendees sampled authentic Caribbean cuisine and craft cocktails, with a lively soca soundtrack setting the tone for the evening, centering the cultural context of the film beyond the screen.

*Queen of Soca*, a feature documentary that chronicles and celebrates Caribbean musical legacy and cultural identity, earned a standing ovation and enthusiastic feedback from the full house. Brown noted that the warm reception confirms a fast-growing global demand for unfiltered, authentic Caribbean storytelling on international stages. Following the screening, audience members joined a virtual question-and-answer session with the film’s director, Kevin Adams, who pulled back the curtain on the documentary’s production process and the core themes of identity and heritage that anchor the work.

Leaders at BEAM Hertford, the venue that hosted the opening, emphasized that the partnership aligns with the space’s core commitment to inclusive cultural programming that elevates global voices. “BEAM is more than a venue; it’s a vibrant home for artists, ideas and community, where everyone can belong,” explained Steve Sargeant, BEAM Hertford’s venue director. “We therefore couldn’t be prouder to host the Trinidad+Tobago Film Festival, an extraordinary series of screenings that celebrate bold storytelling, global voices and the joy of shared cultural experience.”

Patrice Robinson, cinema programmer at BEAM Hertford, added that the opening event achieved far more than just a film screening, creating space for meaningful cross-cultural exchange. “The UK premiere of TTFF Crossroads was a unifying experience, bringing together audiences from Hertford and beyond to enjoy the vibrancy of *Queen of Soca*,” Robinson said. “The standout post-film Q&A with Kevin Adams provided invaluable behind-the-scenes insight, while the launch itself sparked rich conversations celebrating Caribbean culture. Audiences can expect even more cinematic gems from across the region throughout the season.”

The *Crossroads* series will continue screening across four venues in South East England through June 18. Beyond its UK tour, TTFF’s 20th anniversary programming includes a local monthly screening series called 10 for 20, hosted at Port of Spain’s Little Carib Theatre in Trinidad. The curated retrospective revisits 10 landmark films pulled from TTFF’s 20-year archive, inviting local audiences to reconnect with the works that have defined Caribbean screen culture over the past two decades.

Through dual initiatives like the international *Crossroads* tour and the local 10 for 20 retrospective, TTFF continues advancing its core goals: growing the global visibility of Caribbean cinema, creating new professional opportunities for regional filmmakers, and building bridges between creators and audiences across borders. The main 20th edition of the Trinidad+Tobago Film Festival is scheduled to open this September across Trinidad and Tobago.