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Regular programme
Explore our regular programme of world cinema, archive and experimental film.
African Odysseys – an update (26 March 2025)
Over 17 years ago African Odysseys was co-founded by the BFI and our community partners to celebrate and platform Pan-African cinema. The influence of African Odysseys can be felt across all BFI programme from showcasing Black British stories to promoting new African and African diaspora voices.
We would like to reassure our African Odysseys audience that despite some internal staff reorganisation, we do not want this programme to end. However, African Odysseys is programmed in partnership with an external Steering Group, and we have not yet been able to agree on a shared approach to managing it.
In the meantime, our in-house programmers and external advisors and partners continue to ensure that Black British, African, and African diaspora stories are platformed and celebrated across the BFI’s public programme. We are very grateful to the dedication of the Steering Group who have partnered with us to deliver the programme over the years. We will reserve a space in our monthly programme for African Odysseys to return.
Thank you for your continued support. It means a great deal to us.
Ben Roberts
Chief Executive
BFI
Experimenta
Convention-breaking artist film and alternative moving-image culture.
Sound and Vision: Films by Helen Petts + Helen Petts in conversation with musician Steve Beresford
A screening of films by the acclaimed filmmaker followed by a discussion of her work.
Film Wallahs
Showcasing new South Asian and world cinema, from documentary to drama
Hamlet
Riz Ahmed is riveting as a very modern Hamlet in Aneil Karia’s thrilling adaptation of Shakespeare’s play.
Projecting the Archive
Rediscovered British features from the BFI National Archive.
It’s Love Again + intro by Maureen Footer, author of Feel the Floor: Restoring the Life and Legacy of Jazz Choreographer Buddy Bradley
This ultra-stylish Jessie Matthews musical is a brilliant comedy of mistaken identity.
Restored
Masterpieces and recent discoveries from around the world, newly restored.
UK Premiere of 4K Restoration: Bashu, the Little Stranger + intro by film curator Ehsan Khoshbakht
The bond between an orphan and a strong, independent woman who defies tradition and authority lies at the heart of this drama by a filmmaker consistently censored by the theocratic regime of Iran.
Seniors
Free and paid matinees, and talks for the over-60s.
Seniors’ Free Matinee: A Dry White Season + intro by Patrice Robinson, Film Curator
An ordinary man’s conscience is ignited as apartheid’s violence shatters his complacency, in a searing drama about moral courage and the cost of looking away.
Seniors’ Matinee: Blue Heron
In her astonishing and award-winning feature debut, director Sophy Romvari constructs a personal portrait of memory, childhood and family.
Seniors’ Free Matinee: After Hours + intro
This re-evaluated Scorsese romp sees Griffin Dunne as a chronically bored office worker who is drawn into the most chaotic night of his life.
Silent Cinema
Bringing you the best silent film from the BFI and around the world with live accompaniment.
UK premiere of 4K restoration: 3 Bad Men + intro by Bryony Dixon, Rosie Taylor and Makeda Doyal
This magnificent early John Ford western screens at the BFI for the first time.
Woman with a Movie Camera
We celebrate women’s contribution to cinema and spotlight female stories.
Blue Black Permanent + pre-recorded intro by Beth Johnston, Filmmaker
The first feature by a female Scottish filmmaker finds a young woman embarking on a lyrical journey to understand her lineage.
BFI Southbank will be closed Tuesday 23 and Wednesday 24 June due to a private event. BFI Riverfront will be closed on 9 July until 5pm. It will re-open in the evening.
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