Seventy-five years after the 1951 Festival of Britain brought the nation a mood of post-war optimism and excitement about the arts, this week’s object from the archive is the supplement that Sight and ...
At BFI Southbank from 18 to 19 July, the festival returns with a programme of premieres, talks and events championing disabled filmmaking, community and creativity.
The American director’s third narrative feature explores the relationship between the spectator and the spectated with a meta story of a young director who has been tasked with reviving a cult horror ...
Na Hong-jin follows up his cult horror The Wailing with a maximalist monster movie that takes its cue from the pure action cinema of Mad Max: Fury Road.
Alongside this latest round of awards, the UK Global Screen Fund has today launched its brand new Video Games Release funding, designed to support UK video game developers to moun ...
In the first of a new series celebrating films returning to the spotlight in new restorations, Tony Rayns looks at an erotic Manila nightlife drama that troubled the censors but launched a subgenre of ...
The concluding chapter of the director’s Cairo trilogy is an angry portrait of censorship, propaganda and complicity under the rule of Abdel Fattah el-Sisi.
With faking and forgery at the heart of Steven Soderbergh’s new art-world drama The Christophers, we went looking for further frauds on film and came up with these 10 genuine originals.
This week, learn about a brand-new collection on BFI Replay and our assembly celebrating the archive’s progress, planning, and future.
Film unites us. See our screenings, events and how to book tickets.