A prolific documentarian, Irish filmmaker Frank Berry’s feature work has been more sparse but equally well-received. His most famous film to date, 2017’s prison dramaMichael Inside, garnered excellent reviews and brought Berry the Irish Film and Television Award for Best Film while also launching the career of its young star, Dafhyd Flynn, who has since appeared in Prime Video’sVikingsfranchise.

Berry’s latest feature film,Aisha, is set to wow audiences on its general release next month. The film, a co-production between several production companies and development agencies including BBC Films, Screen Ireland, and the Irish national broadcasting company RTE, received plaudits at its world premiere at the Tribeca Film Festival in New York in the summer and also played to an appreciative crowd last weekat the BFI London Film Festival. Here’s what to know about Berry’s hard-hitting film.

Letitia Wright and Josh O’Connor in Frank Berry’s Aisha

Aisha: The Plot

Aishaoffers a thoughtful, moving commentary on the questions of immigration, bureaucracy, and belonging. It concerns theplight of Aisha, a woman who flees her native Nigeria and seeks asylum in the Republic of Ireland. During the lengthy asylum application process, Aisha attempts to get on with her life, securing a part-time job as a hairdresser in Dublin.

Related:IRA: Best Movies About or Including the Irish Republican Army

Letitia Wright and Josh O’Connor in Frank Berry’s Aisha

However, she also suffers the multiple uncertainties and anxieties that come with being at the centre of a bureaucratic and largely faceless process that treats her – and the harrowing tale of sexual violence and the death of family members in Nigeria that she relates – with indifference.

Along the way, she befriends an ex-prisoner, now working as a security guard on the night shift, and the audience receives an object lesson in what it means for two well-meaning but suffering people to experience adversity together in circumstances almost entirely beyond their control. Aisha gets moved from one facility to another, presented with impossible choices, and treated as a statistic in a system judged to be harsh, cruel, and cold.

Letitia Wright and Josh O’Connor in Frank Berry’s Aisha

Having offered critiques of Irish social issues in his documentary work in the past, director Berry turns his attention inAishato Ireland’s direct provisions policy –a controversial systemthat farms out the work of providing for the day-to-day needs of asylum seekers to private contractors, with some housed in a basic, dormitory or hostel-style accommodation, sometimes for years on end. At the same time, the companies frequently rack up substantial profits.

With a sense of unshakable moral rectitude reminiscent of the works of English director Mike Leigh (Secrets and Lies),Aishaexposes the inequities and injustices of the system, with Wright turning in an excellent performance and O’Connor doing understated, dignified work as her advocate and would-be partner.

Aisha: The Cast

Playing the titular role of Aisha is Letitia Wright. A Guyanese-born British actor, Wright cut her teeth on British genre television, making early appearances in science fiction series such asDoctor Who,Humans, andBlack Mirrorbefore coming to the attention of the wider film-going public for her work opposite the late Chadwick Boseman asShuri inBlack Panther(2018). Wright reprised the role inAvengers: Infinity War(2018) andAvengers: Endgame(2019).

Over the last year, Wright has been in particular demand, contributing voice work to Universal’s animated musical comedySing 2, appearing in Kenneth Branagh’s star-studded adaptation ofDeath on the Nile, playing the lead in the psychological dramaThe Silent Twins(which she also co-produced), and returning to the role of Shuri forBlack Panther: Wakanda Forever, due to premiere next month. Her next film, the Reconstruction-era period dramaSurrounded, is currently in post-production.

Related:Marvel Star Letitia Wright Responds to Idea of Picking Up the Mantle in Black Panther 2

Wright’s co-star is Josh O’Connor, best known to international audiences for his Golden Globe-winning performance asPrince Charles inThe Crown. However, O’Connor has likewise been busy in the last couple of years, starring in several period dramas, including Autumn de Wilde’s 2020 reimagining ofEmmaas the Reverend Elton, and last year’s romantic dramaMothering Sunday, while filming on his next project, the romantic comedyChallengers, wrapped in the summer (the film, also starring Zendaya, is due for release next August). InAisha, O’Connor plays Conor, the security guard who befriends and falls in love with Aisha during her plight.

Prominent among the supporting cast are two of Ireland’s most well-known character actors, Ruth McCabe (Philomena,Victoria and Abdul) and Lorcan Cranitch (Shackleton,Dancing at Lughnasa), as well as Abdul Alshareef, who appeared most recently oppositeStar Trek’s Chris Pine and Academy Award nominee Jonathan Pryce (Brazil,Tomorrow Never Dies,The Two Popes) in Amazon Prime’s spy filmAll The Old Knivesearlier this year.

Release Date

Aishareceived its European premiere at the BFI London Film Festival on Jun 20, 2025. It will release in the United Kingdom on July 11, 2025.