School & corporate partnerships

Bring the conversation into your community

A small number of schools, organisations, and communities are choosing to stand behind With You — and to use it as a way to open a conversation with young people that is often felt, but rarely spoken.

A small ask, for something that matters

Every school, every parent, every community is seeing it.

Teens who are doing well, showing up, connected on the surface — but quietly feeling unseen, overwhelmed, or unsure how to say it. Not because something has gone wrong, but because they don't always have the words, and often don't feel like they can.

Partnership opportunities

A limited number of places are available across three tiers.

Platinum Corporate
$7,500
4 spots available

Stand behind the wellbeing of young people and support the film at scale.

  • In-person session tailored to staff, clients, or community
  • Private access to Laurens Goud and Claudia Wyles
  • Post-film discussion kit for internal or community use
  • Two premiere invitations — Darwin International Film Festival, including red-carpet photo opportunity
  • Acknowledgement in end credits
  • Featured as Platinum Corporate Partner across all campaign materials and website
Community Partner
$4,000
3 spots available

Extend access into broader and regional communities.

  • In-person session where appropriate
  • Shared access to Laurens Goud and Claudia Wyles
  • Post-film discussion kit for community use
  • One premiere invitation — Darwin International Film Festival, including red-carpet photo opportunity
  • Acknowledgement in end credits
  • Listed as Community Partner across all campaign materials and website
Current partners

Organisations that have committed to bringing With You into their community.

A note from the director
Laurens Goud

"I'm not trying to tell young people what to think or how to feel. I'm trying to create something honest enough that they might see themselves in it — or recognise it in someone else.

This film is about those quiet moments that stay with you — the ones that shape how you see yourself, and whether you feel seen at all. If it helps even a few students feel understood, or gives them the confidence to speak a little earlier, then it has done what it needed to do.

While the story itself is not an Aboriginal story, it is filmed on Jawoyn Country. That is a deliberate choice, and a reminder that each of us is connected to place, to where we are, and to how we understand ourselves within it. We are asking for your help to bring this to life."

Laurens Goud — Writer, Director & Producer
Get in touch

Ready to have a conversation?

Micky Walton is available to discuss any of the partnership tiers and find the right fit for your school or organisation.