Iran Daily

BFI London Film Festival to be ‘most accessible yet’ as lineup unveiled

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Organizers of this year’s BFI London Film Festival promised the most accessible nationwide event in its history as it presents 58 feature films digitally, to socially distanced audiences, in independen­t cinemas across the UK.

The festival, now in its 64th edition, unveiled a program featuring films from 40 countries by directors including Steve Mcqueen, Phyllida Lloyd, Spike Lee, Miranda July and Francis Lee.

In normal years, attending the festival means booking tickets for screenings on London’s South Bank or in the West End. The festival’s director, Tricia Tuttle, said coronaviru­s had forced a radical rethink, the Guardian wrote.

“There will be no return to business as usual. I’m keen to get back to cinemas as soon as we can but I also love the innovation­s we have been experiment­ing with this year,” she said.

Ben Roberts, the BFI chief executive, said: “Although it’s been born out of crisis, this year’s edition of the LFF will be our most accessible yet.”

The new hybrid way of operating will involve virtual premieres of about 50 films, which only audiences in the UK can book tickets for and watch. Some will be screened live while others will be available for 72 hours. Each will be available to watch just once.

Some of the films will be also screened at BFI Southbank and at independen­t cinemas across the UK including Chapter in Cardiff, Home in Manchester and Queen’s film theater in Belfast.

All of which could dramatical­ly increase audience numbers, though by how many remains to be seen. “It’s really hard to know,” said Tuttle. “We are striking out in totally new ways. I really wouldn’t want to speculate … it’s brand new. We are going big and hope to reach lots of people.”

Another change will be asking the public to decide who wins the festival’s four prizes – for best fiction feature, best documentar­y feature, best short film and best XR (extended reality).

Some of the films will be free to watch, including screenings of the opening film, Mcqueen’s ‘Mangrove’, which tells the story of the trial of the Mangrove Nine. Other films in the program include Thomas Vinterberg’s ‘Another Round’. “I would say that we should all do the same, but after you see the film I think you’ll know it’s not such a great idea,” said Tuttle.

She said social justice, not surprising­ly given the year’s events, was a repeated preoccupat­ion of directors. In that category is the south Londoner Yemi Bamiro and his documentar­y, ‘One Man and His Shoes,’ which explores the increasing commercial­ization of black culture through the lens of Michael Jordan and his trainers.

Tuttle also announced the world premiere of a restoratio­n of Peter Wollen’s neglected 1987 film, ‘Friendship Death,’ which stars a young Tilda Swinton as an alien sent on a mission to make peace and persuade human beings to reform to prevent their extinction.

The BFI London Film Festival runs from October 7 to 18.

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