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  1. A selection of curated programmes that have travelled to major festivals and events. If you want to license BFI content rather than book films for screening, please visit our distribution catalogue sales and licensing page. Explore the films and curated programmes available to screen worldwide from the BFI.

  2. Open call for BFI Film Academy partners to provide short and specialist courses. We are funding partners to deliver short and specialist courses that provide opportunities for young people to develop new skills and build a career in the screen industries. Read more.

  3. BFI Replay. A new free-to-access digital archive exclusively available in UK public lending libraries. Discover thousands of digitised videos and television programmes from the 1960s to the 2010s, offering a glimpse into Britain’s past, its people and places.

  4. www2.bfi.org.uk › distribution › film_formatDVD | Distribution - BFI

    95mins. 71 Fragments of a Chronology of Chance. Dir. Michael Haneke. Austria 1994. 95 mins. The Abbas Kiarostami Collection: Certified Copy, Ten, Taste of Cherry, The Wind Will Carry Us, ABC Africa, 10 on Ten. Dir. Abbas Kiarostami. The Act of Killing. Dir. Joshua Oppenheimer.

  5. www.bfi.org.uk › film-releasesFilm releases | BFI

    BFI distribution; Archive content sales and licensing; Venue hire; BFI book releases and trade sales; Selling to the BFI; Commercial partnerships and consultancy; Join and support; Become a Member; Become a Patron; Using your BFI Membership; Corporate support; Trusts and foundations; Make a donation; About the BFI; Strategy and policy; Press ...

  6. Dec 7, 2023 · Scala Cinema (BFI Distribution/ BFI IMAX / BFI Player/ BFI Southbank/ UK-wide – Jan) – season at BFI Southbank and on BFI Player to mark the BFI Distribution theatrical release (5 Jan) and BFI Blu-ray release (22 Jan) of Scala!!! or, The Incredibly Strange Rise and Fall of the World’s Wildest Cinema and How It Influenced a Mixed-Up Generation of Weirdos and Misfits

  7. La Règle du jeu (1939) Huge-spirited and sharp-eyed, Jean Renoir’s French-society fresco gathers high classes and low for a weekend of country-house fallout. Made on the cusp of WWII, Jean Renoir’s satire of the upper-middle classes was banned as demoralising by the French government for two decades after its release.