A special post celebrating the 10th anniversary of the BFI National Archive’s digital preservation infrastructure.
Our Railway 200 series continues with a look at trains in British animation, from a 1980s Ovaltine advert to a psychedelic gem from the Yellow Submarine team.
Brenda Blethyn is talking about the old days – before she was the star of ITV’s much-loved detective drama Vera, before she played the awful mum to Jane Horrocks in Little Voice and before she won the ...
We’re offering you the chance to win a double pass to the 2025 Russell Hobbs British Film Festival at Palace Cinemas Raine Square. This year’s sensational lineup showcases British brilliance at its ...
A groundbreaking British Sikh feature film, The Ninth Master, is inspiring audiences after an exclusive red carpet event where the cast previewed the official trailer for the first time.
Network Rail and Design Bridge and Partners take us inside the design journey to create the UK’s first national rail clock in 50 years. Last week at London Bridge Station, Rail Clock was unveiled to ...
Directed by Euella Jackson, Community: Becoming Black and British “shines a light on the lived experiences of Black communities across the UK and the positive influence of community organisations and ...
Jilly Cooper, the prolific British author whose steamy Rutshire Chronicles novels were the basis of Disney+ comedy-drama Rivals, has died aged 88. She passed away suddenly on Sunday morning after a ...
Today marks 200 years since the world’s first passenger railway journey. On September 27, 1825, around 450 people made the 26-mile journey from Shildon to Stockton in the north-east of England on a ...
A newly-discovered short film by Terence Davis is set to have its world premiere at a special celebration of the late filmmaking icon being put on by the British Film Institute. “Boogie,” made in 1980 ...
For some time British cinema companies have been having a thoroughly unhappy time of it. Most of their difficulties arise from the difficulty experienced in competing with imported U. S. films.
Terence Stamp, the British actor who often played the role of a complex villain, including that of General Zod in the early Superman films, has died. He was 87. His death on Sunday was disclosed in a ...