Were any potential all-time great pictures made this year? Perhaps Joachim Trier’s Sentimental Value has a shot. It does remarkably well in capturing one family’s relationship in somewhat universal ...
It’s not all fond recollection at year’s end, however, and a handful of screenings mark the passing of some of cinema’s major figures. David Lynch, Robert Redford, Terence Stamp, and Tom Stoppard are ...
From Pillion to My Father’s Shadow and Lollipop, it’s been a big year for BFI NETWORK alumni furthering their careers with award-winning debut features.
Josh O’Connor plays a priest suspected of murder in Rian Johnson’s latest Knives Out mystery. We spoke to the actor and director about the big themes and ensemble dynamics underlying this darker entry ...
Kathryn Bigelow’s A House of Dynamite, a tense political thriller hinging on the threat of nuclear annihilation, is the most compelling film of her career. She discusses her commitment to authenticity ...
In celebrating trains on screen for the 200th anniversary of Britain’s passenger railways, who could forget a certain tank engine called Thomas, who debuted on television in 1984 and would later ...
Epic Games’s Fortnite platform played host to The Simpsons and Quentin Tarantino, Microsoft upped their prices and a French RPG dominated at the game awards in another packed year for video games.
Over £763,000 of funding has been awarded to UK independent companies to co-produce with seven territories, with a further £776,000 allocated through the International Distribution Strand.
BFI curators select their favourite new programmes and series from a year on British TV. How many have you watched?
As a new collection curated by Sofas & Stuff arrives on BFI Player, we spoke to the Sofas & Stuff team about their favourite festive films and viewing traditions.
Castle's documentary Shoot the People focuses on Oscar-nominated British Nigerian photographer, filmmaker and activist Misan Harriman, who was the first Black man to shoot a cover of British Vogue, ...
Ari Aster's Eddington, in which Joaquin Phoenix's conspiracist sheriff and Pedro Pascal's tech-friendly centrist lock horns in an election, lays bare the deep divisions in the American psyche. The ...
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