Wire report

Shoot the People review – a powerful portrait of a talented yet controversial photographer

Misan Harriman was catapulted into a new career after turning his camera to anti-racist demonstrations – though the shadow of more recent criticism looms This is a documentary portrait of the celebrated British-Nigerian photographer, film-maker and activist Misan Harriman, who has campaigned on Gaza and Black Lives Matter, that was completed before the row in May about some of his social media posts . These appeared to amplify anti-Zionist conspiracy theories about media coverage of the Golders Green attack , and inelegantly quoted Susan Sontag’s comments on the Holocaust in relation to Reform UK’s electoral successes. His supporters said this controversy was a smear campaign – and if the film had been made later, Harriman might have wanted to answer the criticisms levelled against him. As it stands, Harriman emerges from this film as a talented, self-taught photographer: articulate, flu

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Misan Harriman was catapulted into a new career after turning his camera to anti-racist demonstrations – though the shadow of more recent criticism looms This is a documentary portrait of the celebrated British-Nigerian photographer, film-maker and activist Misan Harriman, who has campaigned on Gaza and Black Lives Matter, that was completed before the row in May about some of his social media posts . These appeared to amplify anti-Zionist conspiracy theories about media coverage of the Golders Green attack , and inelegantly quoted Susan Sontag’s comments on the Holocaust in relation to Reform UK’s electoral successes. His supporters said this controversy was a smear campaign – and if the film had been made later, Harriman might have wanted to answer the criticisms levelled against him. As it stands, Harriman emerges from this film as a talented, self-taught photographer: articulate, flu

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According to The Guardian’s linked source, Shoot the People review – a powerful portrait of a talented yet controversial photographer, Misan Harriman was catapulted into a new career after turning his camera to anti-racist demonstrations – though the shadow of more recent criticism looms This is a documentary portrait of the celebrated British-Nigerian photographer, film-maker and activist Misan Harriman, who has campaigned on Gaza and Black Lives Matter, that was completed before the row in May about some of his social media posts . These appeared to amplify anti-Zionist conspiracy theories about media coverage of the Golders Green attack , and inelegantly quoted Susan Sontag’s comments on the Holocaust in relation to Reform UK’s electoral successes. His supporters said this controversy was a smear campaign – and if the film had been made later, Harriman might have wanted to answer the criticisms levelled against him. As it stands, Harriman emerges from this film as a talented, self-taught photographer: articulate, flu

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The development sits in VINI’s Technology coverage for readers following technology, science, product policy, markets, infrastructure, and the public consequences of innovation. The original report is linked so readers can check the publisher account, follow later updates, and compare new coverage against the first published record. The original item is dated 2026-07-06T08:00:05+00:00.

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Primary source: Shoot the People review – a powerful portrait of a talented yet controversial photographer via The Guardian. VINI cites and links the source; it does not reproduce the publisher’s full article text without rights clearance.

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