The 64th BFI London Film Festival (LFF) in partnership with American Express has announced the full programme of its reimagined and innovative new 2020 offering that will be delivered both virtually and via physical screenings. Over the twelve days from 7 – 18th October, the Festival will be its most accessible ever, presenting over 50 Virtual Premieres and a selection of highly-anticipated new feature film previews at BFI Southbank as well as in cinemas across the UK, offering audiences a unique chance to engage with the Festival in different ways.

With work from more than 40 countries, the programme includes fiction, documentary, animation, artists’ moving image, short film, restored classics from the world’s archives as well as previews of several episodic/series-based works made for the small screen.

Every screening will be presented with an intro or Q&A from filmmakers and programmers. The Festival also includes many ways audiences can engage with the Festival for free: LFF Opening screenings of Mangrove in cinemas across the UK; selected feature films on BFI Player; an international programme of short films featuring established and breakthrough film talents; Screen Talks with major filmmakers and actors, as well as all online salons and Q&As across the Festival which will give audiences an opportunity to delve more deeply into themes and talking points emerging from the programme. The recently announced LFF Expanded strand of XR and Immersive Art will also be free to access both virtually and at BFI Southbank for the duration of the Festival.

All films are geo-blocked to the UK while all the Festival talks and LFF Expanded are available to experience for free from anywhere in the world.

As is befitting this audience-facing and innovative edition, this year the Festival Awards are in the hands of the audience, who will take the place of the Festival’s Official Jury. Viewers engaging with the Festival online will be invited to vote on Virtual LFF Audience Awards in four categories: Best Fiction Feature, Best Documentary Feature, Best Short Film, and Best XR. The winners will be announced in a live online ceremony on the final weekend of the Festival. We will also announce The IWC Schaffhausen Filmmaker Bursary Award in association with the BFI winner at the Awards Ceremony. The Bursary benefits an outstanding first or second time British writer, director, or writer/director. The recipient of the award will receive £50,000, which is the most significant of its kind in the UK film industry and awarded annually.

OPENING & CLOSING FILM

As previously announced, this year’s Opening Film will be MANGROVE, directed by the multi-award-winning visual artist and filmmaker Steve McQueen, starring Letitia Wright, Shaun Parkes and Malachi Kirby. The film will receive its European Premiere on Wednesday 7th October and will screen for free to audiences at cinemas in cities across the UK as part of a unique partnership between the LFF, the BBC and selected independent cinemas. Marking 50 years since the events depicted in the film, MANGROVE tells the true story of the Mangrove 9, the group of Black activists who clashed with London police during a protest march in 1970 and their highly publicised trial that followed. The film is part of Small Axe, a drama anthology which comprises five original films created by Steve McQueen for BBC One.

The Festival closes with Francis Lee’s biopic AMMONITE, a film that is every bit as immersive, tactile and emotionally powerful as Francis Lee’s debut God’s Own Country, aided by a devastating performance by Kate Winslet and supported brilliantly by Saoirse Ronan. A fictionalised account of the life of the 19th century paleontologist Mary Anning, Winslet plays the pioneering scientist with Ronan as the gentlewoman who falls in love with her while staying in Mary’s beloved Lyme Regis. The film will receive its UK premiere on Saturday 17th October and will be available to UK audiences at cinemas across the UK who will also enjoy a virtual introduction from Lee and key cast.

Harry Macqueen’s introspective road movie SUPERNOVA, a deeply affecting and quietly provocative exploration of love in the face of tragedy, is driven by beautiful performances from Colin Firth and Stanley Tucci as a couple with a long history and an uncertain future. Based on personal experience, writer/director/star Matthew Fifer and co-director Kieran Mulcare have crafted a richly textured drama in CICADA, following the story of a young man living in New York who embarks on a new relationship and is forced to face the traumas of his past. Joanna Scanlan is superb as a woman left reeling upon discovering her late husband’s secrets in AFTER LOVE, the knockout feature debut from BAFTA-nominated short filmmaker Aleem Khan. Phyllida Lloyd reunites with her all-female Shakespeare collaborators, Clare Dunne and Harriet Walter, in HERSELF, a stirring drama about a woman who refuses to be broken. In DAYS, Tsai Ming-liang’s profound commitment to less is more flourishes in this exuberantly corporeal work, which is anchored by Lee Kang-shyung’s transfixing performance. The Teddy Award winner for Best Documentary at the Berlin Film Festival, IF IT WERE LOVE, is Patric Chiha’s intoxicating dance piece that documents the production of choreographer Giselle Vienne’s Crowd, a visceral dance performance exploring the 90’s rave scene. Migration, memory and the importance of home are deftly explored in FAREWELL AMOR, the affecting feature debut from Ekwa Msangi, which sees a New York-based Angolan man finally reunited with his wife and daughter. Paula Beer embodies a modern-day incarnation of the mermaid myth in UNDINE, the latest from contemporary German cinema’s most audacious storyteller Christian Petzold.

In Farnoosh Samadi’s debut feature Iranian 180° RULE, she crafts a delicately woven portrait of tragedy whilst examining the structures that subtly control women’s lives. Rob Lemkin’s harrowing yet urgent documentary AFRICAN APOCALYPSE shines a lens on the trauma and legacy of colonialism in one of Africa’s poorest nations, Niger. Documentary love story TIME is Garrett Bradley’s poignant feature documentary debut following Fox Richardson who has spent over 20 years campaigning for the release of her husband who was sentenced to life without parole for a botched armed robbery. IDENTIFYING FEATURES is a compelling first feature from Fernanda Valadez that finds a mother embarking on an Odyssey-like search for her missing son across the Mexican border terrain where law and order has effectively broken down. South Londoner Yemi Bamiro’s pacey, engrossing documentary ONE MAN AND HIS SHOES reveals the darker side of marketing trainers, examining the cultural and commercial phenomena of Michael Jordan against the increasing commodification of Black culture and a lack of corporate accountability. Bohdan Sláma’s striking epic SHADOW COUNTRY is a unique account of life in a Czech-Austrian border village from the 1930s-1950s, which saw a community sacrificed to political ideology. Since 1969 there have been over 2000 deaths in police custody in the UK and this frightening statistic is approached with seasoned conviction in ULTRAVIOLENCE, Ken Fero’s follow up to his ground-breaking film Injustice. In INDUSTRY a group of young graduates navigate the cutthroat world of international finance in this electrifying series from British writing duo Konrad Kay and Mickey Down, executive produced by Lena Dunham.

Writer-director Talya Lavie follows a quarrelling couple who hit the streets of Jerusalem on their wedding night to confront family, ex-partners and random oddballs on whether they have a future together in HONEYMOOD. In KAJILLIONAIRE, Evan Rachel Wood, Richard Jenkins and Debra Winger play a family of unusually creative grifters trying to scam the system in director Miranda July’s deadpan, offbeat love story. NEVER GONNA SNOW AGAIN, the latest feature by LFF regular Malgorzata Szumowska, is a characteristically fresh, funny and thought-provoking tale highlighting the indiscreet charms of the Polish bourgeoisie.

Josephine Decker’s psychodrama SHIRLEY, sees a brilliant Elizabeth Moss as writer Shirley Jackson, get the inspiration she needs for her novel about the disappearance of a local girl when two young newlyweds come to stay. A formal and disarming brilliance characterises director Francisco Márquez’s A COMMON CRIME, following the story of economics lecturer Cecilia, who refuses to let the son of her housekeeper into the house one stormy night and is forced to face the consequences of her decision after he disappears. Like a twisted gothic fairy tale, the D’Innocenzo brothers’ impressive second feature BAD TALES follows the dark doings of a group of dysfunctional families during a sweltering Roman summer. Bassam Tariq’s visceral directorial debut, MOGUL MOWGLI, co-written with Riz Ahmed, follows a British-Pakistani rapper (portrayed by Ahmed) whose life spirals out of control when, on the cusp of success, he succumbs to a debilitating illness. Érica Rivas plays an overdub artist on the edge in THE INTRUDER, a playful and deeply enjoyable giallo-infused Argentinian psycho-thriller directed by Natalia Meta. In NEW ORDER, a society wedding in a gated home in Mexico City serves as the ground for Michel Franco’s taut and terrifying exploration of class schisms, inequalities and corruption. Idiosyncratic auteur Abel Ferrara returns with SIBERIA, an extraordinarily vivid, visually dazzling and characteristically strange rumination on sex, dreams and death, starring Willem Dafoe. Sisterly bonds are pushed to breaking point in WILDFIRE, a simmering drama set on the Irish border, the debut feature from acclaimed shorts director Cathy Brady.

Brandon Cronenberg’s nightmarish follow-up to 2012’s Antiviral, POSSESSOR is an insanely enjoyable and graphically gruesome identity-swap thriller starring Andrea Riseborough as Tasya Vos, a psychic and possibly psychotic hitwoman-for-hire, who hijacks other people’s minds and manipulates them into carrying out undetectable murder-suicides. Three generations of women are plagued by a supernatural presence in Natalie Erika James’ immensely satisfying directorial debut RELIC, which stars Emily Mortimer. UK director Jennifer Sheridan has crafted a darkly claustrophobic horror experience in her debut ROSE, an inspired twist on the vampire myth that follows an isolated couple who must keep a dark secret hidden at all costs.

Sibling directing duo Bill and Turner Ross document the last night ever at the Roaring 20’s cocktail lounge in BLOODY NOSE, EMPTY POCKETS, tapping into the community spirit that local bars engender and the real connections people make in unexpected places. Mads Mikkelsen reunites with Thomas Vinterberg in ANOTHER ROUND, a spirited and thought-provoking drama that asks if a regular tipple is the key to unlocking the best version of yourself. Visionary Filipino director Lav Diaz returns with GENUS PAN, another beguiling allegory of human greed and brutality. GOLD FOR DOGS is the provocative tale of a young woman lost in Paris and represents a dazzling debut showcase for writer/director Anna Cazenave Cambet and a fearless lead performance by Tallulah Cassavetti. Peter Murimi’s courageous feature debut I AM SAMUEL offers an intimate portrait of a young gay Kenyan couple as they navigate their way in a country where homosexuality is criminalised. Veteran documentarian Gianfranco Rosi’s delicate and poignant feature NOTTURNO journeys into the border communities of Iraq, Kurdistan, Syria and Lebanon. Rezwan Sumit’s directorial debut THE SALT IN OUR WATERS follows a young artist who relocates to coastal Bangladesh to practice his art, but in doing so up-turns the local community’s age-old customs and taboos. A soulful new voice emerges in Elizabeth Lo’s evocative award-winning debut documentary STRAY, which details life on the streets of Istanbul from the perspective of the city’s stray dogs. Based on Naoki Higashida’s ground-breaking memoir, THE REASON I JUMP is award-winning director Jerry Rothwell’s compelling and rare cinematic and sensorial insight into the world of people with nonspeaking autism. Arie and Chuko Esiri’s stunning debut EYIMOFE takes Nigerian cinema to incredible new heights in a richly woven tale of city life.

Nomadland

In A DAY OFF FOR KASUMI ARIMURA, Japanese actor Kasumi Arimura plays a fictional version of herself in this charming example of Hirokazu Kore-eda’s rarely seen television work. In NOMADLAND, Frances McDormand illuminates Chloé Zhao’s follow-up to The Rider, a humane and lyrical film about people living on the road in the American West.

In DAVID BYRNE’S AMERICAN UTOPIA, Spike Lee transforms David Byrne’s wildly popular Broadway show into immersive, dynamic cinema that radiates with astounding performances, inventive contemporary dance and political urgency. In DELIA DERBYSHIRE: THE MYTHS AND LEGENDARY TAPES, director Caroline Catz traces acoustic pathways on her archaeological dig into the resonant life of audio exploration and psycho-acoustics pioneer Delia Derbyshire, famed for conceiving one of the most familiar compositions in science fiction, the Doctor Who theme. Shot in 35mm and paying homage to London’s rock scene, ZANKA CONTACT is Ismael El Iraki’s intoxicating debut, a psychedelic Casablanca-set love story between faded rock star Larsen Snake and jaded prostitute Rajae. Winner of the Creative Storytelling Prize at Sundance, Benjamin Ree’s genre-blending documentary THE PAINTER AND THE THIEF explores the personal repercussions of an extraordinary art heist. In STRIDING INTO THE WIND, writer/director Wei Shujun presents a restless odyssey of the post-90s generation in Beijing, centring on the wayward life of hard-headed film school dropout Kun. Executive produced by Alfonso Cuarón and directed by Chaitanya Tamhane, THE DISCIPLE is a sublime Mumbai-set sophomore feature that finds a classically trained musician both striving for and questioning the notion of excellence.

SOUL marks Director Pete Docter’s latest big-screen adventure since Inside Out. Here Docter teams up with Kemp Powers, who co-directs and wrote the screenplay with Docter and Mike Jones. Another knock-out animation from Pixar with an all-star cast led by Jamie Foxx, SOUL tells the story of Joe Gardner, a musician who finds himself embarking on an unexpected journey of self-discovery to The Great Before. In WOLFWALKERS, Cartoon Saloon follow up their acclaimed The Breadwinner and TheSong of the Sea with another beautifully realised animated drama for all ages, this one set 17th-century in the Irish city of Kilkenny, occupied by Cromwell’s forces.

Festival Information & Ticket Booking

Full Festival Program: www.bfi.org.uk/explore-our-festivals/bfi-london-film-festival
Public booking opens Monday 21st September
Telephone Bookings: 020 7928 3232
Online: www.bfi.org.uk/lff

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