Screenwriter and filmmaker Chris Sparling has joined Simon Panay’s award-winning, Oscar-qualified short film The Boy with White Skin as executive producer. The film, which has amassed more than 60 festival selections including the France Télévisions Grand Prize at Clermont-Ferrand, Breaking Boundaries Grand Prize at Rhode Island, Best European Short Film at Flickerfest and Best Narrative Short (Oscar Qualifying) at Balinale, continues to gain momentum on the international awards circuit heading into 2025.
Sparling, known for Buried starring Ryan Reynolds, Gus Van Sant’s The Sea of Trees, and the global box office success Greenland, said he was struck by the film’s originality and emotional weight.
“Going in, I had no idea what Simon’s film was about, and when I watched it, I was quite stilled by what I’d just seen,” Sparling said. “The craftsmanship and the uniqueness of the narrative are on their own remarkable, and I was genuinely given pause in some instances, feeling as though I was made privy to something sacred, portrayed with striking verisimilitude.”
The Boy with White Skin, written and directed by Panay, explores the collision of myth and modernity inside the gold mines of West Africa. The story follows a young albino boy believed by miners to possess protective spiritual power, his voice becoming part of a ritual intended to safeguard workers from the dangers underground.
Panay, who has spent over a decade immersed in the region’s mining communities, describes the mines as “a world where the line between reality and legend dissolves,” adding, “Gold is a Beast, one that must be hunted, tracked, and confronted in a deadly duel before it can be claimed.”
The film is produced by Senegal’s Astou Production and France’s Bandini Films, with distribution by Manifest Pictures.
Sparling’s upcoming projects include Greenland: Migration, the sequel to the 2020 thriller, as well as multiple writing and producing projects in development.
The Boy with White Skin is set to continue its festival rollout, with additional screenings and U.S. events forthcoming.





