Programme Notes

BFI Southbank

Fire Festival

SPOILER WARNING The following notes give away some of the plot. Mitsuo Yanagimachi is the foremost independent director of his generation in Japan, coming midway between the last of the industry-t...

Memento Mori

This was Jack Clayton’s last film, his first comedy, and his most critically acclaimed work since his sensational 1959 feature-film debut, Room at the Top. That same year, Muriel Spark had publishe...

Moving

Moving talks about present-day problems in Japan. The story takes place in the town of Kyoto, a town where the richness of traditional language and a certain way of thinking in relation to human em...

The Emperor’s Naked Army Marches On

It is tempting to annex The Emperor’s Naked Army Marches On to Shohei Imamura’s filmography. Imamura suggested the project in the first place, and effected Kazuo Hara’s introduction to Kenzo Okuzak...

Swan Song

Writers, artists, and filmmakers have long considered the massive implications of being able to replace human life with a facsimile but while others have gone down dark alleys, Benjamin Cleary saw ...

After Love

Aleem Khan’s debut feature After Love scrutinises bereavement as a mental health disorder, diving into not just the sorrow but the derangement of grief. As newly widowed Mary, Joanna Scanlan offers...

Bridget Jones's Diary at 20

+ Q&A with director Sharon Maguire A contemporary review Bridget Jones’s Diary begins with its heroine (Renée Zellweger) casually dropping coins in a homeless couple’s cup on her way to work....

Carol

SPOILER WARNING The following notes give away some of the plot. Patricia Highsmith’s 1952 lesbian love story Carol, originally a pseudonymously published million-selling pulp fiction, The Price of...

The Black Balloon

Today’s screening will have a pre-recorded introduction by autistic actor Jules Robertson (Holby Cit and star of new short film Love). Actor Jules Robertson (Holby City) selects this coming-of-a...

Tampopo

+ intro by Catherine Wheatley, King’s College London (Monday 13 December only) Juzo Itami and Nobuko Miyamoto talk about sex, food and death Juzo Itami was born in Kyoto in 1933. His father Mansak...

Philosophical Screens
Tampopo

Our regular Philosophical Screens series, which explores cinema through a philosophical lens, returns this month with a focus on one of the most genre-bending films about noodles. Join our regular ...

Muddy River

+ intro by season co-programmer Alexander Jacoby (Saturday 12 December only) Kôhei Oguri’s debut is a deliberately nostalgic evocation of the world of classical filmmakers such as Ozu and Shimizu....

It's a Wonderful Life

David Mamet on ‘It’s a Wonderful Life’ In Frank Capra’s It’s a Wonderful Life the screenwriters warp an old-world vision into a populist myth. The old-world vision is Charles Dickens’ A Christmas C...

1970s Odd Pop and Rare Rock

The Precious Things season gives us the perfect opportunity to pore through the deeper alcoves of the archives to liberate material that would often otherwise lay unseen for decades. Today’s compil...

The Great Gatsby

SPOILER WARNING The following notes give away some of the plot. Jack Clayton active involvement with The Great Gatsby began in the autumn of 1971, though his interest goes a long way further back....

Billy Bang Lucky Man

+ intro by author Kevin Le Gendre, and Q&A with co-director Markus Hansen In March 1967 Billy Bang was conscripted to fight in the jungles of Vietnam. On his return to the US he experienced a...

The Lonely Passion of
Judith Hearne

SPOILER WARNING The following notes give away some of the plot. Jack Clayton’s first British film in twenty years, and his last cinema feature, was adapted from Brian Moore’s 1956 novel, its actio...

Death by Hanging

SPOILER WARNING The following notes give away some of the plot. Nagisa Ôshima’s most radical and brilliant film starts with an unsuccessful execution and proceeds into a stylised re-enactment of t...

tick, tick...BOOM!

+ pre-recorded Q&A with director Lin-Manuel Miranda, producer Julie Oh, executive producer Julie Larson, writer Steven Levenson and actors Andrew Garfield, Vanessa Hudgens, Alexandra Shipp, Rob...

Seven Samurai

When Akira Kurosawa’s Seven Samurai premiered in Japan on 26 April 1954, it was the most expensive domestic production ever, costing 125 million Yen (approximately $350,000), almost five times the ...