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  1. Screen Culture 2033 is our new ten-year strategy that sets out how we will transform access to our programmes, screen culture and jobs. This new vision sets out how we will use its unique and valuable collections, cultural and education programmes, policy and research work, with a new BFI National Lottery Strategy 2023-2033 and BFI National Lottery Funding Plan 2023-2026 to build a diverse and ...

  2. British Film Institute (BFI) The BFI uses National Lottery funding to inspire people the watch, make and learn about film. They curate and present an international public programme of world cinema for audiences in cinemas, at festivals and online. The BFI National Archive is the most significant film and television archive in the world.

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

    The Eternal Daughter. In cinemas 24 November 2023. On BFI Player / Blu-ray January 2024. View more.

  4. BFI Film Academy Specialist Courses. BFI Film Academy run a variety of Specialist Courses for talented and committed young people aged 16 to 19 to develop new skills and build a career in the film industry. Apply.

  5. British Film Institute; Product Type. General Interest; Open Access; Scholarly; Textbook; Series. BFI Film Classics; BFI Screen Guides; BFI Silver; BFI TV Classics; British Screen Stories; Cultural Histories of Cinema; Film Stars; International Screen Industries; Teaching Film and Media Studies; Teaching Media at GCSE; Understanding the Moving ...

  6. www.bfi.org.uk › bfi-national-archive › search-bfiSearch the BFI archive | BFI

    How to start your search. The best place to start is with collections search to see what’s available. The collection is international in scope, but contemporary collecting is focused on British work across all genres and types of filmmaking. The BFI National Archive contains a huge collection of. film. television. still images. posters and ...

  7. The BFI National Archive is a department of the British Film Institute, and one of the largest film archives in the world. It was founded as the National Film Library in 1935; its first curator was Ernest Lindgren. In 1955, its name became the National Film Archive, and, in 1992, the National Film and Television Archive. It was renamed BFI ...

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