What’s on at BFI Southbank
Four screens open seven days a week for the widest choice of great films.
Find out moreHow to Train Your Dragon at BFI IMAX
A stunning live-action reimagining of the film that launched the beloved franchise, on the UK’s biggest screen.
Find out moreBFI 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.
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The Greatest Films of All Time issue
Once a decade the magazine asks critics to select the best films ever made. Explore the results in a special edition.
Subscribe nowFeatures and reviews
David Lynch season announced for January 2026
As the BFI Film on Film Festival came to a close with a 35mm screening of Twin Peaks with special guest Kyle MacLachlan, we announced our plans to honour David Lynch with a forthcoming BFI season.
Sight and Sound: the Summer 2025 issue
Sight and Sound: the Summer 2025 issue70 years of Hammer’s The Quatermass Xperiment: a very British alien invasion movie
By George Bass
“Offers more hope than any other British film of the 1980s so far”: Local Hero reviewed in 1983
By Nick Roddick
Juliet & Romeo: a hollow Shakespeare musical
By Violet Lucca
Lollipop: an emotional rollercoaster through the UK’s Kafka-esque social housing system
By Catherine Wheatley
10 great British animated feature films
By Jez Stewart
Events
In our latest Inside the Archive video we go far, far away – all the way back to 1977 – to examine an original IB Technicolor dye-transfer print of Star Wars (Dir. George Lucas, 1977), held in the BFI National Archive’s collections.
More on YouTubeScreen Culture 2033
Our new ten-year strategy that sets out how we will transform access to our programmes, screen culture and jobs.
Find out moreWatch archive collections
The BFI National Archive has one of the most important film and TV collections in the world. Choose from a selection of 11,000 titles that cover 120 years of British life, and the history and art of film.
Explore