Screening dates and booking

As a BFI Member you can log in to book now. If you’re not a Member yet, sign up today and enjoy Member benefits.

Access information

Live captions:
Wednesday 09 October 14:00

Find out about booking access tickets

Introduction

Artist and filmmaker Steve McQueen has never distinguished between his artwork and cinema practice. His films have evinced a formal audacity and his entire corpus has explored social, political, racial and cultural issues, past and present, locally and within a wider international context. Beyond their themes, his films also carry an emotional weight that makes them as involving as they are thought-provoking.

Some 15 years after he began making a series of acclaimed video artworks and gallery pieces, and nine years after winning the Turner Prize, McQueen made his feature directorial debut with the sparse, uncompromising drama Hunger (2008). His account of the final days of IRA political prisoner, MP and hunger striker Bobby Sands began his collaboration with Michael Fassbender, who played the protagonist in the filmmaker's subsequent film, Shame (2011), which looked at the destructive impact of sex addiction. In 2013, McQueen directed the Oscar®-winning 12 Years a Slave, based on the writings of Solomon Northup, a free African American sold into slavery in 1841.

Racial injustice was also the predominant theme of the filmmaker's anthology TV drama series Small Axe (2020), made in the same year he was knighted by Queen Elizabeth II, and the documentary series Uprising (2021). Both received BAFTA awards. In 2018, McQueen directed a big screen version of the 1980s TV hit Widows, centring on a group of women who orchestrate a heist, relocating the action from London to Chicago. And in 2023 he collaborated with his partner Bianca Stigter on Occupied City, an expansive documentary adaptation of her book Atlas of an Occupied City, Amsterdam 1940-1945. His latest narrative feature, Blitz, opens this year's Festival and we are delighted to welcome Steve McQueen to this Screen Talk to discuss his remarkable body of work.

How to book

Tickets start from £10 for all screenings and events in London, with concessions available for many screenings. Booking information and ticket prices

If you’re aged 16 to 25, sign up for free to our BFI 25 & Under scheme for a chance to get £5 tickets to all screenings and events.

Missed out?

More tickets may become available for these screenings before and during the festival. Find out about extra ticket releases.

Our programmers recommend...

A Beginner’s Guide to... Steve McQueen

A beginner’s guide to the films of Academy Award-winning filmmaker and Turner Prize-winning artist Steve McQueen.

Read more about A Beginner’s Guide to... Steve McQueen

Screen Talk: Daniel Kaluuya

The festival welcomes actor, writer, producer and director Daniel Kaluuya to this Screen Talk, where he will discuss his wide-ranging career.

Read more about Screen Talk: Daniel Kaluuya

Screen Talk: Lupita Nyong’o

The festival welcomes Lupita Nyong’o to this Screen Talk, where she will discuss her wide-ranging career, including new film The Wild Robot.

Read more about Screen Talk: Lupita Nyong’o