Director Sarah Friedland explores the human mind in all its frailness and glory with her exquisite drama about a woman with dementia adjusting to a new life at an assisted living facility.
Broadcast on BBC2 in 1984, Threads dramatised the fallout from a nuclear attack on Sheffield with harrowing realism. We look back on a TV movie that scarred a generation of viewers for life.
Paul Duane, the director of modern Irish folk horror All You Need Is Death, speaks to Robert Wynne-Simmons, whose haunting 1982 film The Outcasts has re-emerged after decades of obscurity.
Lee’s film adapts the graphic novel by her ex-partner Chester Brown, creating a candid his-and-hers narrative of their open relationship and its break down.
The events lineup includes LFF Spotlight conversations with Working Title Films co-chairs Tim Bevan and Eric Fellner; Head of International Production and Development at Searchlight Pictures, Katie ...
As London’s Open House Festival offers a glimpse inside the capital’s most impressive buildings, we take a look at the modern house on film.
Director Clio Barnard takes us behind the scenes of the second series of acclaimed Nottingham-based crime drama Sherwood.
Despite its impressive cast, this portrait of surrealist artist and wartime photographer Lee Miller can at times feel a little lifeless.
A 70-year-old widow in Tehran shakes up her predictable existence when she pursues a relationship with a lonely taxi driver in Maryam Moghaddam and Behtash Sanaeeha‘s defiant tale of late-in-life ...
New releases screening at BFI IMAX in late October and November will include Joker: Folie à Deux (Todd Phillips, 2024) and Gladiator II (Ridley Scott, 2024), plus The Shining (Stanley Kubrick, 1980) ...
The key directors who shaped the Indian new wave of formally and thematically radical films that kicked off at the end of the 1960s.
A stinging satire on the British film industry, a Netflix thriller that delivers the goods, and a glowing tale of ageing romance. What are you watching this weekend?