By Patrick Cremona

Published: Tuesday, 29 November 2022 at 12:00 am


From Cool Runnings to Eddie the Eagle, films telling the stories of unlikely sporting heroes have often proven popular with audiences – and new Netflix movie The Swimmers very much fits into that genre.

Penned by director Sally El Hosaini alongside prolific screenwriter Jack Thorne, the film tells the story of two swimming sisters who dream of representing Syria at the Olympic Games until they are forced to flee their war-torn country.

Shining a light on the horrifying plight facing thousands of refugees around the globe, the film is much more than just a sporting underdog story – read on for everything you need to know about the true story.

The Swimmers true story 

The film is based on the incredible true story of Olympian Yusra Mardini and her sister Sara, who left war-torn Syria in 2015 with the intention of seeking asylum in Germany.

Yusra and Sara were both aspiring Olympic swimmers, and their expertise came to the rescue when extremely perilous conditions in the Aegean Sea meant they had to heroically drag the boat which was carrying them and several other refugees to safety.

When they eventually arrived in Germany, Yusra was especially determined to continue chasing her Olympic dream, and with help from coach Sven Spannekrebs she ended up representing the IOC Refugee Olympic Team at the 2016 and 2020 Olympic Games.

Meanwhile, Sara decided to switch focus, and after leaving her swimming aspirations behind, she started volunteering in Greece to help refugees like her make safe passage across the sea.

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The Swimmers.
Netflix

By and large, The Swimmers sticks very closely to the true story, with both Mardini sisters having been involved in the production – even though Yusra wasn’t initially interested in the idea of a film.

“I said, ‘Look, sorry, I’m not going to do this right now,’ but [producer] Ali Jaafar didn’t give up,” she explained. “We kept texting and saw films he had produced and thought he was a nice guy. Then the conversation started getting serious after we got the book [Butterfly: From Refugee to Olympian – My Story of Rescue, Hope, and Triumph] out in 2018 and we signed a deal with Working Title.”

Early on in the process, screenwriter Jack Thorne met with Yusra and her coach Sven so that they could tell him their story, but he quickly realised the film needed to have a stronger focus on the relationship between the two Mardini sisters, and so asked if he could be introduced to Sara as well.

“We sat in a room together [with Yusra and Sven] and they told the story, but the idea that it’s Yusra and Sven’s story felt like the wrong angle to me,” he said. “I didn’t know much about Syria or about being a refugee, but I do know an awful lot about being a sibling.

“And so I was like, ‘Who’s Sara and when can I meet her?’ I wanted to challenge the notion of what a refugee looks like, sounds like, and the more I got to know Yusra and Sara, the more it felt like a very noble relationship to me.”