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5 FILMS you don’t want to MISS!! BFI London Film Festival

5 FILMS you don’t want to MISS!! BFI London Film Festival


 
 


The BFI London Film Festival in partnership with American Express is back in London and cinemas around the UK. RUNNING  9-20 October in London and around the UK.Everyone is invited. Tickets from £10 (£5 for 16-25 year olds). HURRY FILMS ARE SELLING OUT!


Extra tickets for some screenings and events on Thursday 3 October 10:00. Visit bfi.org.uk/lff for more info.  

Aged 16-25, registering for a free BFI 25 & Under account will give you access to tickets for just £5 across the line-up. Discover highly anticipated new films from around the world, series, free events, Screen Talks and immersive storytelling(including games)
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Explore the FULL PROGRAMME HERE The Piano Lesson
Samuel L. Jackson, John David Washington and Danielle Deadwyler star in Malcolm Washington’s involving adaptation of August Wilson’s Pulitzer Prize-winning play.
The Piano Lesson BOOK NOW
 Patrice: The Movie
Prepare to fall in love with Patrice Jetter – crossing guard, artist, figure skater, disability activist and much, much more – in Ted Passon’s warm-hearted and compassionate documentary.
Patrice: The Movie BOOK NOW
 
Nickel Boys
Director RaMell Ross1960s, Tallahassee. Elwood Curtis is sent to the reformatory Nickel Academy for a crime he didn’t commit. Present day, New York. A revelation about the abuses suffered by the Academy’s students leads Curtis to remember his life-changing friendship with Jack Turner. Ross’s film is a dazzling achievement – a bold and beguiling exploration of trauma and buried American history. 
Nickel Boys BOOK NOW
A Real Pain
 Jesse Eisenberg cements his reputation as a gifted filmmaker with this witty and heartfelt portrait of two estranged cousins honouring their roots. 
A Real Pain BOOK NOW
Hard Truths Director-screenwriter Mike Leigh
Sisters Pansy and Chantal are chalk and cheese, but their close bond is the foundation that their extended family is built upon. Lately, life has proven too much for Pansy, her anguish manifests in relentless criticism of the world, leaving her husband Curtley, son Moses and Chantal walking on eggshells. Things come to a head over the course of a Mother’s Day weekend. Rarely have the nuances of familial relations been so accurately captured on screen.
Hard Truths BOOK NOW
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