In ‘Lost Boys: Belfast’s Missing Children’, fresh investigative journalism uncovers an extraordinary tale of child disappearances and murder, MI5 interference, witchcraft and potential cover up.
New documentary ‘Lost Boys: Belfast’s Missing Children’ will have its joint World Premiere in Belfast in partnership with Docs Ireland on Thursday 28 September at the Odeon Cinema and in Dublin on Wednesday 27 September in partnership with the Irish Film Institute (IFI).
During the winter of 1969, young boys started to disappear from the streets of Belfast, never to be seen again. By 1974, as the Troubles were reaching a bloody and vicious peak, five boys in total had vanished within a five-mile radius. The remains of only one, 11-year-old Brian McDermott, were found.
Fifty years later, as the disappearances remain unsolved and families continue to search for answers, filmmaker Des Henderson (How to Defuse A Bomb: The Project Children Story) reopens these largely forgotten cold-cases, talking to fresh witnesses, and unearthing disturbing revelations in secret state documents. Could all 5 disappearances be linked with each other?
In a real-life thriller, and with the help of criminologist Robert Giles, journalist Martin Dillon and investigative reporter Chris Moore, the film explores every lead to try and find out what may have happened to these young boys. For every stone the team turns over, it becomes clearer that dark forces are at play on an incomprehensible scale. Deep state cover-up sounds like the stuff of conspiracy theory, but this investigation poses some troubling questions. The documentary asks if the state knew more than has been revealed, or even worse, if it was complicit in some way.
Speaking ahead of the ‘Lost Boys: Belfast’s Missing Children’ premiere, Director Des Henderson said:
“When we set out to make this documentary, we knew we were dealing with a sensitive subject matter. Little did we know as we started to investigate, we would find such a sinister set of circumstances surrounding the disappearance of five young boys within the same area.”
“Due to the nature of the revelations in the documentary; there have been many twists and turns in the completion of the film.”
“It has been 50 years since the boys went missing, so we feel like it is now or never for their story to be heard. At the time there was concerningly little media coverage of what had happened, and the boys seemed to disappear from the public’s mind just as quickly as they had from the street.”
“It is unlikely that the boys will ever have justice, given how long ago these crimes took place, but the least we can do is try to expose the truth surrounding their disappearance, and who may have been involved.”
‘Lost Boys: Belfast’s Missing Children’ Producer Ed Stobart added:
“It has taken 5 years of intense investigation to get the film to screen, and along the way we have amassed a huge body of evidence around some of the Troubles’ darkest remaining secrets, many of which extend beyond the cases we set out to investigate.”
“From what we have found, especially around the Kincora Boys Home scandal, there is much more to be told about the ‘Dirty War’ than is fully in the public domain. The security services, MI5 in particular, have a lot of questions to answer.”
“The suffering experienced by the families of the missing and murdered boys, and all those who were abused on an almost industrial scale in Kincora must have been unimaginable. We hope that this film might aid any process that brings them some measure of justice.”