Directors Christine Molloy and Joe Lawlor dig deep into their thrilling biopic Baltimore, in discussion with Nadia M Oliva.
Directors Christine Malloy and Joe Lawlor dig deep into their thrilling biopic Baltimore, in discussion with Nadia M Oliva.
BFI Player films are not available to watch in the US. Join us on BFI Player Classics to start enjoying an unrivalled selection of classic British movies.
Stop! Look! Listen! For decades public information films have been educating, persuading and above all warning us of hidden dangers.
British cinema boasts a long history of carefully coded queerness, but for much of the 20th century explicit depictions of gay life in drama or documentary were more or less taboo. Gay men were ...
Now a favourite on the festival circuit, Glendining’s debut feature documentary is thought-provoking and funny – a sensitive film that challenges you to stop and re-evaluate. Glendining set out to ...
A teenage girl navigates friendship groups, social awkwardness and boys in this sharp coming of age drama. Screened as part of BFI London Film Festival 2023 Shorts programme Stories We Tell.
One of Waters’ most notorious films is Pink Flamingos (1972), a film which legendary critic Roger Ebert famously offered zero stars. With scenes involving chicken sex, a singing orifice and the ...
Queen Victoria's long reign famously saw extraordinary advances: in industry, transport, science, culture... But one vital innovation is too often missed: the moving image, the last great invention of ...
Use your preferred email address. BFI Player films are not available to watch in the US. Join us on BFI Player Classics to start enjoying an unrivalled selection of classic British movies.
Kevin Brownlow’s portrait of the last days of Glasgow’s tram system centres on the last tram to run in 1962, accentuating the mood of the final journey by contrasting shots of the event to the funky ...
Malcolm X's legacy was on Spike Lee's mind when making his classic 1989 film Do the Right Thing, and he would contentiously end that film with a quote from the man that many read as endorsing violence ...