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Officially Selected for the Festival Season 

January 2026

RAP LIKE GRANDMA: SUNI & 7 PRINCESSES

RAP LIKE GRANDMA: SUNI & 7 PRINCESSES

Director:

Patrycja Skawska

Producer:

Promofilm Art

Writer:

Patrycja Skawska

Selected for the following category(s)

Best Documentary Short

"Rap Like Grandma: Suni & 7 Princesses" is a 30-minute documentary about loneliness - not as a vague emotion, but as a condition shaped by everyday life, routine, and silence. It follows a group of South Korean women from the rural town of Chilgok, aged 80 to 94, who spent most of their lives working in the fields, raising siblings, and living without access to formal education. In their eighties, they began learning Hangul, the Korean alphabet, which unexpectedly opened the door to poetry, music, and community. What started as a simple literacy class grew into a rap group. They now write their own lyrics and perform both locally and internationally. Their story has drawn attention from media outlets including the BBC and Reuters.


The film explores how loneliness often hides in plain sight, not only among the elderly, but across generations. These women do not claim to have solved it, yet their journey shows that isolation can be challenged when people create, connect, and find purpose together. Their rap is not a gimmick - it is a tool of expression, memory, and joy, built from lives that had long been overlooked.


What they have built together as a group that laughs, writes, and performs carries its own quiet truth. Staying alive is not only a matter of years but of connection. Joy, purpose, and the sense of being needed can stretch time in ways that no medicine ever could. Their story does not try to explain or instruct. It simply shows a path that works, one that is lived rather than declared.

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