BFI London Film Festival

Docu-fiction at London Film Festival: Little Girl Blue and Ramona

Acting is becoming someone else and inhabiting them convincingly. Rarely do we see that process…

In Camera – BFI London Film Festival Review

Aden (Nabhaan Rizwan) is a young actor who’s been struggling through audition after audition with…

Bye Bye Tiberias – BFI London Film Festival Review

Though she has been a mainstay of TV and film for more than twenty-five years,…

Power Alley – BFI London Film Festival Review

Sofia (Ayomi Domenica Dias) is the star player on her high-school volleyball team, under pressure…

London Film Festival 2022: The best of the rest of the fest

Here’s a rundown of some of the other hidden gems from this year’s London Film…

Emily the Criminal – BFI London Film Festival Review

Emily (Aubrey Plaza) never intended to be delivering food to get by at this stage…

Liquor Store Dreams – BFI London Film Festival Review

To be a liquor store owner in America is an unglamorous, exhausting, dangerous prospect. Most…

The Worst Ones – BFI London Film Festival Review

A film crew, led by debut director Gabriel (Johan Heldeburgh), have come to a working-class…

Small, Slow but Steady – BFI London Film Festival Review

Boxing is a dangerous sport at the best of times, but for deaf fighters, those…

6 films to watch at BFI London Film Festival 2022

The news is bleak, and so’s the weather, but at least the London Film Festival…

London Film Festival 2021: The best of the rest of the fest

With over 150 features in this year’s programme, inevitably some of the best films in…

Wild Indian – BFI London Film Festival Review

It’s 1988, and Native American child Makwa (Phoenix Wilson) is bullied at home and bullied…