




Home is a socially urgent, globally relevant, and commercially viable feature documentary with purpose.
In the aftermath of the Grenfell Tower fire, the UK’s deadliest residential fire since World War II, a devoted father who lost his home and family embarks on a relentless quest to expose the corruption he believes lies behind the tragedy. But as his pursuit for truth and justice deepens, he faces a profound personal dilemma: choosing between justice for his community and reconciliation with those he loves.
Exploring universal themes of displacement, homelessness, and unsafe housing, Home offers a powerful reflection on resilience, accountability, and the human cost of systemic failure.
I’m drawn to stories that reveal what our institutions prefer to keep unseen. Alen’s story from the pavement, and uniquely trained to read the system’s failures, sees patterns most of us miss. His pursuit to expose those failures begins as a forensics of cladding and codes, but becomes an intimate reckoning with grief, obsession, and identity. I chose to tell this story embracing rare emotional access and visual proximity: to sit with Alen’s resolve, his spirals, and his hope, rather than abstract them into headlines.
Miles Blayden-Ryall is a Grierson & multi-award winning, double BAFTA and double Emmy nominated filmmaker. His credits include the feature length documentary, Silverback & Life and Death Row: The Mass Execution. The hallmark of Miles’ work is taking the audience on a journey to understand why we all do the things we do, within the wider social and cultural context that each story occurs.



