Programme Notes

BFI Southbank

Desperately Seeking Susan

SPOILER WARNING The following notes give away some of the plot. Although Desperately Seeking Susan has been sold as a Madonna vehicle directed at the teenage market, its success in the US has been...

The Leopard

The casting of Burt Lancaster in the title role threatened to poison the production from the very beginning, since Goffredo Lombardo, head of the production company Titanus, had made the decision t...

The Wizard of Oz

On 13 October 1938 Production No.1060 on the MGM’s Culver City lot went before the cameras. A full six months later than the moneymen wanted, the film had already notched up the kind of budget MGM ...

8 Mile

No performer since David Bowie in the 1970s has better exploited the actorly impulses at the heart of pop music than hip-hop star Eminem. Shuffling a deck of alter egos (alongside his stage name he...

Scrooge

One of the best-known adaptations of Charles Dickens’ Christmas classic, Brian Desmond Hurst’s 1951 film stars Alastair Sim as the notorious curmudgeon Ebenezer Scrooge, visited by the ghosts of Ch...

It's a Wonderful Life

Frank Capra cleared his throat, and began. The war was over and he was anxious to make another movie. In early October 1945, he approached Lew Wasserman, James Stewart’s agent at MCA, telling him t...

Eternal Sunshine
of the Spotless Mind

‘Kaufman’s script showcases a perfect balance between intelligent and resourceful storytelling.’ – Carolina, BFI Member We celebrate the 20th anniversary of director Michel Gondry and writer Charl...

A Sudden Glimpse to Deeper Things

Scottish artist Wilhelmina Barns-Graham – voiced here by Tilda Swinton – had an extraordinary creative passion. In his poetic documentary portrait, Mark Cousins explores her artistic practice, re...

Meet Me in St. Louis

The closer you look at most famous Hollywood productions, the harder it is to see how they turned out all right – let alone to believe that anyone was in charge. Just as on any set the crew trusts ...

GoodFellas

SPOILER WARNING The following notes give away some of the plot. A contemporary review Scorsese’s return to the milieu of Mean Streets invites comparison less with that film than with Coppola’s The...

The Dresser

Richard Eyre on ‘The Dresser’ What made you want to get involved in this production of The Dresser ? I was approached by executive producer Colin Callender and asked if I would like to make a fil...

The Shop around the Corner

Ernst Lubitsch grew up in Berlin as the son of the Russian Jewish émigré owner of a dressmaking company. He knew the world of shops and they feature often in his films. Perhaps witnessing the patte...

Notes on a Scandal

‘People have always trusted me with their secrets. But who do I trust with mine?’ (Barbara Covett, Notes on a Scandal) Two women caught up in a drama of need and betrayal are at the heart of this ...

Eyes Wide Shut

Jan Harlan (executive producer): Stanley’s idea was to show a modern hell, a very abstract concept, a hell into which people enter out of boredom – money and wealth won’t do it any longer. Did he s...

The Umbrellas of Cherbourg

Les Parapluies de Cherbourg enjoys a legendary place as an all-but-unique curiosity in French cinema – the film for which the epithet ‘bittersweet’ was invented, less a musical (though French examp...

Carol

SPOILER WARNING The following notes give away some of the plot. Adapted from a Patricia Highsmith novel, Haynes’ typically elegant yet acerbic movie charts the intense (yet hesitant and furtive) r...

Monty Python’s Life of Brian

+ intro by Justin Johnson, BFI Lead Programmer (Wednesday 11 December) According to legend, the idea for Life of Brian stemmed from a throw-away remark by Eric Idle during an interview shortly aft...

The Apartment

SPOILER WARNING The following notes give away the film’s ending. Wilder’s much-lauded classic is a film of contradictions: a romantic comedy about suicide and adultery, at once glaringly ‘Hollywoo...

Tangerine

It’s Christmas Eve and at a donut shop in Hollywood a couple of transgender sex workers meet up to discuss a problem one of them faces. Soon, questions of infidelity, the fine line between performa...

Iris

+ extended intro by Sir Richard Eyre and Dame Judi Dench (8 December only) ‘Essentially, Iris is about forms of love and the way in which love changes and love endures,’ explains director Richard ...