Letitia Wright, Aneil Karia to Receive HollyShorts London Honors

HollyShorts London, the U.K. edition of the HollyShorts Film Festival, will honor BAFTA-winning actress and filmmaker Letitia Wright and Academy Award-winning director Aneil Karia with its Trailblazer Award during the festival’s second annual edition for “their outstanding contributions to cinema.”

“Letitia Wright, globally known for her role as Shuri in Marvel’s Black Panther franchise, has emerged as a powerful creative force behind the camera,” organizers said. “Her directorial debut, Highway to the Moon, premiered at HollyShorts Los Angeles to critical acclaim and will screen again at HollyShorts London. The film marks a significant new chapter in Wright’s career, showcasing her emotional and culturally nuanced storytelling.”

The short unravels the mysterious aftermath of young boys whose lives have been abruptly taken. “Inspired by the real-life tragedy of a close friend’s family member who was killed in a knife attack, Wright transforms personal grief into a layered exploration of violence, memory, and spiritual resilience,” HollyShorts said.

Beyond Marvel Cinematic Universe, Wright has been shining with performances in Black MirrorSmall Axe: Mangrove, and Aisha. In 2019, she won the BAFTA Rising Star Award.

“Thank you, HollyShorts, for this beautiful award,” the star said. “This film was birthed from a place of love and a strong desire to see unity amongst our young boys. This film is my love letter to them. This journey has been a challenge but incredibly rewarding. Thank you for the opportunity to share this story with you!”

Karia is the other Trailblazer honoree at HollyShorts London 2025. “Celebrated for his bold, emotionally resonant storytelling across film and television, in 2022, Karia’s Oscar-winning short The Long Goodbye, co-created with Riz Ahmed, gained international acclaim after winning the Grand Prix at HollyShorts Los Angeles,” organizers highlighted. “The film also received a BIFA and the London Critics’ Circle Award for best short film. Karia has recently completed his second feature, a modern adaptation of Hamlet, starring Riz Ahmed, Morfydd Clark, Joe Alwyn, and Tim Spall, which premiered at Telluride before screening at Toronto and London Film Festivals. His debut feature Surge, starring Ben Whishaw, premiered at Sundance, where Whishaw won the special jury prize for acting.”

Karia’s TV work includes directing duties on Netflix’s Top Boy and the BBC/Paramount+ series The Gold. In 2026, he will begin production on The Ministry of Time, a new series written by Alice Birch and produced by A24. He has also made a name for himself with his work on commercials and music videos.

“I owe a huge debt of gratitude to HollyShorts,” said Karia. “Their recognition of The Long Goodbye in 2021 played a key part in its journey and ultimately its Oscar win, but more importantly, they’ve built a festival that consistently spotlights bold, original voices and gives new filmmakers genuine visibility. It’s an honor to be acknowledged by a team that keeps pushing short film culture forward.”

Wright and Karia join such past honorees as David Oyelowo, Jared Hess, Alden Ehrenreich, Catherine Hardwicke, and Tom Skerritt.

The HollyShorts London festival runs Nov. 13-16, with screenings taking place at Vue Cinemas in Leicester Square.

Check out the HollyShorts London 2025 lineup below.

A Death in the Family — Yasmin Hafesji 

A Friend of Dorothy — Lee Knight 

A Good Death — Kaz PS 

Ado — Sam Henderson 

All Beauty Queens Have Broken Bones — Max C Tullio 

Back of the Net — Klara Kaliger 

Beauty Sleep — Jasmine De Silva 

Bile Bile — Rango Mugo 

Blue Violet — Josie Charles 

Bluff — Naomi Wright 

Borscht — Vika Evdokimenko 

Boyfighter — Julia Weisberg Cortés 

Bullet Time — Eddie Alcazar 

Bury Your Gays — Charlotte Serena Cooper 

Busy — Jane Moriarty 

Care — Stef O’Driscoll 

Chasers — Erin Brown Thomas 

Chivalry — Charlotte Yang 

Dating in Your 20s — Lily Rutterford, Lucy Minderides 

Egg Timer — Rosie May Bird Smith 

Everyone Does It — Craig Ainsley 

Fenced — Richey Beckett 

Fighting Demons — Simon Stock 

First Timer — Hannah Kathryn Kelso 

G.S.W. — Jonny Durgan 

Goodnight Ladies — Alex Matraxia 

Hat Trick — Tess Lafia, Noah Deats 

Highway To The Moon — Letitia Wright 

Hotel Fantasma — Martin Aleman 

Hugel – The Entourage — Ludovic Genco, Hugo Lucas Pompier 

Humantis — Paris Baillie 

Imperfect Cadence — Ewan S. Henry 

In Foreign — Didi Beck 

Largo — Salvatore Scarpa, Max Burgoyne-Moore 

Love & Loss — Mike Upson 

Magid / Zafar — Luís Hindman 

Naked Lights — Jeda de Brí 

Night Terrors — Ben Hector 

Nothing but the End — Tanguy Pichon 

OK/NOTOK — Pardeep Sahota 

Overcomer — Olawale Adetula 

Paranoia — Alina Bichieva 

Pearls — Alastair Train 

Plastic Surgery — Guy Trevellyan 

Rise — Jessica J. Rowlands 

Rock Paper Scissors — Franz Böhm 

Rocket Fuel — Jordon Scott Kennedy 

Running against time — Alex Lockett 

Satomi — Rayner Wang 

Secret Level New World – The once & Future King — Maxime Luère 

Set Pace — Daisy Ifama 

Snipped — Alexander Saul 

Spoken In Plain Sight — Ilya Wray, Ariel de la Garza Davidoff 

Stomach Bug — Matty Crawford 

The Beneath — Lisette Vlassak 

The Bunker — Ian Killick 

The Dartmoor Cowboy — Wij Travers 

The Errand — Hayley Marie Norman 

The Last Dance — Hayden Mclean 

The Last Dumpling — Jadey Duffield 

The Lone Piper — Matthew Kravchuk 

The Mediator — Dean Leon Anderson 

The Morning After — Zak Harney 

The Painting & The Statue — Freddie Fox 

The Pearl Comb — Ali Cook 

The Professional Parent — Erik Jasaň 

The Second Time Around — Jack Howard 

The Secret Assistants — Katey Lee Carson 

The Singers — Sam Davis 

The Woman in the Wardrobe — Ruby Phelan 

There’s a Robbery in Progress — Morgan Miller 

Two Black Boys in Paradise — Baz Sells 

Two People Exchanging Saliva — Alexandre Singh, Natalie Musteata 

Umbra — Seb Gillmore 

Victory — Meji Alabi 

Wavelength — Kate Auster 

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