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British Film Institute

The British Film Institute (BFI) is a film and television charitable organisation which promotes and preserves film-making and television in the United Kingdom. The BFI uses funds provided by the National Lottery to encourage film production, distribution, and education. It is sponsored by the Department for Digital, Culture, Media and Sport,[2] and partially funded under the British Film Institute Act 1949.[3]

British Film Institute
AbbreviationBFI
PredecessorUK Film Council
Formation1933; 90 years ago (1933)
TypeFilm, television charitable organisation
HeadquartersLondon, England, UK
Region served
United Kingdom
Chairman
Tim Richards
Chief Executive
Ben Roberts
Revenue (2021)
£1,865,545[1]
Websitewww.bfi.org.uk

Purpose

It was established in 1933 to encourage the development of the arts of film, television and the moving image throughout the United Kingdom, to promote their use as a record of contemporary life and manners, to promote education about film, television and the moving image generally, and their impact on society, to promote access to and appreciation of the widest possible range of British and world cinema and to establish, care for and develop collections reflecting the moving image history and heritage of the United Kingdom.[4]

BFI activities

Archive

The BFI maintains the world's largest film archive, the BFI National Archive, previously called National Film Library (1935–1955), National Film Archive (1955–1992), and National Film and Television Archive (1993–2006). The archive contains more than 50,000 fiction films, over 100,000 non-fiction titles, and around 625,000 television programmes. The majority of the collection is British material but it also features internationally significant holdings from around the world. The Archive also collects films which feature key British actors and the work of British directors.

Cinemas

 

The BFI runs the BFI Southbank (formerly the National Film Theatre (NFT)) and the BFI IMAX cinema, both located on the south bank of the River Thames in London.[5] The IMAX has the largest cinema screen in the UK and shows popular recent releases and short films showcasing its technology, which includes 3D screenings and 11,600 watts of digital surround sound.[6] BFI Southbank (the National Film Theatre screens and the Studio) shows films from all over the world, particularly critically acclaimed historical and specialised films that may not otherwise get a cinema showing. The BFI also distributes archival and cultural cinema to other venues – each year to more than 800 venues all across the UK, as well as to a substantial number of overseas venues.[7]

Education

The BFI offers a range of education initiatives, in particular to support the teaching of film and media studies in schools.[8] In late 2012, the BFI received money from the Department for Education to create the BFI Film Academy Network for young people aged between 16 and 25.[9][10][11] A residential scheme is held at the NFTS every year.

Festivals

The BFI runs the annual London Film Festival along with BFI Flare: London LGBT Film Festival and the youth-orientated Future Film Festival.[12]

Other activities

The BFI publishes the monthly Sight & Sound magazine as well as films on Blu-ray, DVD and books. It runs the BFI National Library (a reference library), and maintains the BFI Film & TV Database and Summary of Information on Film and Television (SIFT), which are databases of credits, synopses and other information about film and television productions. SIFT has a collection of about 7 million still frames from film and television.

The BFI has co-produced a number of television series featuring footage from the BFI National Archive, in partnership with the BBC, including The Lost World of Mitchell & Kenyon, The Lost World of Friese-Greene, and The Lost World of Tibet.

The BFI has also produced contemporary artists' moving image work, most notably through the programme of the BFI Gallery, which was located at BFI Southbank from March 2007 to March 2011. The programme of the gallery resulted in several new commissions by leading artists, including projects which engaged directly with the BFI National Archive, among which: Patrick Keiller's 'The City of the Future', Iain Forsyth and Jane Pollard's 'RadioMania: An Abandoned Work' and Deimantas Narkevicious' 'Into the Unknown'. The Gallery also initiated projects by film-makers such as Michael Snow, Apichatpong Weerasethakul, Jane and Louise Wilson and John Akomfrah.[13][14]

The BFI also operates a streaming service called BFI Player. This streaming service offers a variety of niche and art films.[15]

Organisation

History

The institute was founded in 1933.[16] Despite its foundation resulting from a recommendation in a report on Film in National Life, at that time the institute was a private company, though it has received public money throughout its history—from the Privy Council and Treasury until 1965 and the various culture departments since then.

The institute was restructured following the Radcliffe Report of 1948 which recommended that it should concentrate on developing the appreciation of filmic art, rather than creating film itself. Thus control of educational film production passed to the National Committee for Visual Aids in Education and the British Film Academy assumed control for promoting production. From 1952 to 2000, the BFI provided funding for new and experimental film-makers via the BFI Production Board.

The institute received a royal charter in 1983. This was updated in 2000, and in the same year the newly established UK Film Council took responsibility for providing the BFI's annual grant-in-aid (government subsidy). As an independent registered charity, the BFI is regulated by the Charity Commission and the Privy Council.

In 1988, the BFI opened the London Museum of the Moving Image (MOMI) on the South Bank. MOMI was acclaimed internationally and set new standards for education through entertainment, but subsequently it did not receive the high levels of continuing investment that might have enabled it to keep pace with technological developments and ever-rising audience expectations. The museum was "temporarily" closed in 1999 when the BFI stated that it would be re-sited. This did not happen, and MOMI's closure became permanent in 2002 when it was decided to redevelop the South Bank site. This redevelopment was itself then further delayed.

Today

The BFI is currently managed on a day-to-day basis by its chief executive, Ben Roberts. Supreme decision-making authority rests with a chair and a board of up to 14 governors. The current chair is Josh Berger, who took up the post in February 2016.[17] He succeeded Greg Dyke, who took office on 1 March 2008. Dyke succeeded the late Anthony Minghella (film director), who was chair from 2003 until 31 December 2007. The chair of the board is appointed by the BFI's own Board of Governors but requires the consent of the Secretary of State for Culture, Media and Sport. Other Governors are co-opted by existing board members when required (but if one of these is appointed Deputy Chair, that appointment is subject to ratification by the Secretary of State).[18]

The BFI operates with three sources of income. The largest is public money allocated by the Department for Culture, Media and Sport. In 2011–12, this funding amounted to approximately £20m.[citation needed] The second largest source is commercial activity such as receipts from ticket sales at BFI Southbank or the BFI London IMAX theatre (£5m in 2007), sales of DVDs, etc. Thirdly, grants and sponsorship of around £5m are obtained from various sources, including National Lottery funding grants, private sponsors and through donations (J. Paul Getty, Jr. donated around £1m in his will following his death in 2003). The BFI is also the distributor for all Lottery funds for film (in 2011–12 this amounted to c.£25m).[citation needed]

As well as its work on film, the BFI also devotes a large amount of its time to the preservation and study of British television programming and its history. In 2000, it published a high-profile list of the 100 Greatest British Television Programmes, as voted for by a range of industry figures.[citation needed]

The delayed redevelopment of the National Film Theatre finally took place in 2007, creating in the rebranded "BFI Southbank" new education spaces, a contemporary art gallery dedicated to the moving image[19] (the BFI Gallery), and a pioneering mediatheque which for the first time enabled the public to gain access, free of charge, to some of the otherwise inaccessible treasures in the National Film & Television Archive. The mediatheque has proved to be the most successful element of this redevelopment, and there are plans to roll out a network of them across the UK.[citation needed]

An announcement of a £25 million capital investment in the Strategy for UK Screen Heritage was made by Secretary of State for Culture Media and Sport at the opening night of the 2007 London Film Festival. The bulk of this money paid for long overdue development of the BFI National Archive facilities in Hertfordshire and Warwickshire.[citation needed]

During 2009, the UK Film Council persuaded the government that there should only be one main public-funded body for film, and that body should be the UKFC, while the BFI should be abolished. In 2010, the government announced that there would be a single body for film. Despite intensive lobbying (including, controversially, using public funding to pay public relations agencies to put its case forward), the UKFC failed to persuade the government that it should have that role and, instead, the BFI took over most of the UKFC's functions and funding from 1 April 2011, with the UKFC being subsequently abolished. Since then, the BFI has been responsible for all Lottery funding for film—originally in excess of £25m p.a., and currently in excess of £40m p.a.[citation needed]

The BFI Film Academy forms part of the BFI's overall 5–19 Education Scheme. The programme is being supported by the Department for Education in England who have committed £1m per annum funding from April 2012 and 31 March 2015. It is also funded through the National Lottery, Creative Scotland and Northern Ireland Screen.

On 29 November 2016, the BFI announced that over 100,000 television programmes are to be digitised before the video tapes, which currently have an estimated five-to-six-year shelf life, become unusable. The BFI aims to make sure that the television archive is still there in 200 years' time.[20]

The BFI recently announced that it is teaming up with American diversity and inclusion program #StartWith8Hollywood founded by Thuc Doan Nguyen to make it global.[21]

BFI Chair

BFI directors

  • J. W. Brown (1933–1936)
  • Oliver Bell (1936–1949)
  • Denis Forman (1949–1955)
  • James Quinn (1955–1964)
  • Stanley Reed (1964–1972)
  • Keith Lucas (1972–1978)
  • Anthony Smith (1979–1987)
  • Wilf Stevenson (1988–1997)
  • Jane Clarke (acting, 1997)
  • John Woodward (1998–1999)
  • Jon Teckman (1999–2002)
  • Adrian Wootton (acting, 2002–2003)
  • Amanda Nevill (2003–2020)
  • Ben Roberts (2020–present)[24]

See also

References

  1. ^ "Charity overview, BFI TRUST – 1140833, Register of Charities – The Charity Commission". Retrieved 2 August 2022.
  2. ^ "British Film Institute". Government of the United Kingdom.
  3. ^ "Financial Legislation". BFI ScreenOnline. Retrieved 30 August 2022.
  4. ^ Elizabeth II (18 July 1983). (PDF). Charity Commissioners for England and Wales. Archived from the original (PDF) on 3 October 2008. Retrieved 6 October 2008.
  5. ^ . Queen Mary University of London. Archived from the original on 24 August 2017. Retrieved 24 August 2017.
  6. ^ "BFI IMAX BFI". from the original on 20 March 2021. Retrieved 12 March 2016. Britain's biggest cinema screen – 20 m x 26 m, IMAX 2D and 3D, 70 mm and 35 mm film projectors[citation needed]
  7. ^ Brown, Mark (23 May 2016). "BFI releases online film collection documenting British rural life". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. from the original on 20 March 2021. Retrieved 12 May 2019.
  8. ^ "Education and research". British Film Institute. from the original on 20 March 2021. Retrieved 23 April 2008.
  9. ^ . Archived from the original on 10 December 2014. Retrieved 23 May 2013.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  10. ^ Katy Rice. "Brighton and Hove to take leading film industry role". The Argus. from the original on 20 March 2021. Retrieved 23 May 2013.
  11. ^ "Nothing to stop us now: the BFI Film Academy's graduates". British Film Institute. from the original on 20 March 2021. Retrieved 23 May 2013.
  12. ^ "BFI". British Film Institute. from the original on 28 November 2019. Retrieved 13 April 2016.
  13. ^ Fabrizi, Elisabetta (ed.), The BFI Gallery Book, BFI 2011
  14. ^ Fabrizi, Elisabetta, 'Is This Cinema?', in 'Artists' Moving image in Britain since 1989', edited by Balsom, Erika, Perks, Sarah, Reynolds, Lucy, Paul Mellon Foundation/Yale University Press, London 2019
  15. ^ "Greatest global cinema on BFI Player". player.bfi.org.uk. Retrieved 27 April 2022.
  16. ^ "British Film Institute – GOV.UK". Government of the United Kingdom. Retrieved 24 August 2017.
  17. ^ "Josh Berger to take over as Chair of the BFI". from the original on 20 March 2021. Retrieved 21 September 2016.
  18. ^ "Department for Culture and the BFI Agreement 2012–15" (PDF). BFI. (PDF) from the original on 20 March 2021. Retrieved 12 May 2019.
  19. ^ Fabrizi, Elisabetta, (Ed.) 'The BFI Gallery Book', BFI 2011.
  20. ^ Masters, Tim (29 November 2016). "Basil Brush and Tiswas among 'at risk' TV shows, says BFI". BBC News. from the original on 20 March 2021. Retrieved 21 June 2018.
  21. ^ Jones, Monique. "Women of Color Unite Expands #StartWith8 Mentorship Program To The UK". Shadow and Act.
  22. ^ Andrew Pulver (22 December 2015). "Warner Bros' Josh Berger appointed chair of BFI". The Guardian. from the original on 20 March 2021. Retrieved 10 March 2016.
  23. ^ "Tim Richards announced as new Chair of the BFI". British Film Institute. 11 February 2021. from the original on 20 March 2021. Retrieved 25 February 2021.
  24. ^ "Ben Roberts appointed Chief Executive, BFI | BFI". from the original on 20 March 2021. Retrieved 26 February 2020.

External links

  • Official website

british, film, institute, redirects, here, other, uses, disambiguation, film, television, charitable, organisation, which, promotes, preserves, film, making, television, united, kingdom, uses, funds, provided, national, lottery, encourage, film, production, di. BFI redirects here For other uses see BFI disambiguation The British Film Institute BFI is a film and television charitable organisation which promotes and preserves film making and television in the United Kingdom The BFI uses funds provided by the National Lottery to encourage film production distribution and education It is sponsored by the Department for Digital Culture Media and Sport 2 and partially funded under the British Film Institute Act 1949 3 British Film InstituteAbbreviationBFIPredecessorUK Film CouncilFormation1933 90 years ago 1933 TypeFilm television charitable organisationHeadquartersLondon England UKRegion servedUnited KingdomChairmanTim RichardsChief ExecutiveBen RobertsRevenue 2021 1 865 545 1 Websitewww wbr bfi wbr org wbr uk Contents 1 Purpose 2 BFI activities 2 1 Archive 2 2 Cinemas 2 3 Education 2 4 Festivals 2 5 Other activities 3 Organisation 3 1 History 3 2 Today 4 BFI Chair 5 BFI directors 6 See also 7 References 8 External linksPurpose EditIt was established in 1933 to encourage the development of the arts of film television and the moving image throughout the United Kingdom to promote their use as a record of contemporary life and manners to promote education about film television and the moving image generally and their impact on society to promote access to and appreciation of the widest possible range of British and world cinema and to establish care for and develop collections reflecting the moving image history and heritage of the United Kingdom 4 BFI activities EditArchive Edit The BFI maintains the world s largest film archive the BFI National Archive previously called National Film Library 1935 1955 National Film Archive 1955 1992 and National Film and Television Archive 1993 2006 The archive contains more than 50 000 fiction films over 100 000 non fiction titles and around 625 000 television programmes The majority of the collection is British material but it also features internationally significant holdings from around the world The Archive also collects films which feature key British actors and the work of British directors Cinemas Edit London IMAX cinema The BFI runs the BFI Southbank formerly the National Film Theatre NFT and the BFI IMAX cinema both located on the south bank of the River Thames in London 5 The IMAX has the largest cinema screen in the UK and shows popular recent releases and short films showcasing its technology which includes 3D screenings and 11 600 watts of digital surround sound 6 BFI Southbank the National Film Theatre screens and the Studio shows films from all over the world particularly critically acclaimed historical and specialised films that may not otherwise get a cinema showing The BFI also distributes archival and cultural cinema to other venues each year to more than 800 venues all across the UK as well as to a substantial number of overseas venues 7 Education Edit The BFI offers a range of education initiatives in particular to support the teaching of film and media studies in schools 8 In late 2012 the BFI received money from the Department for Education to create the BFI Film Academy Network for young people aged between 16 and 25 9 10 11 A residential scheme is held at the NFTS every year Festivals Edit The BFI runs the annual London Film Festival along with BFI Flare London LGBT Film Festival and the youth orientated Future Film Festival 12 Other activities Edit The BFI publishes the monthly Sight amp Sound magazine as well as films on Blu ray DVD and books It runs the BFI National Library a reference library and maintains the BFI Film amp TV Database and Summary of Information on Film and Television SIFT which are databases of credits synopses and other information about film and television productions SIFT has a collection of about 7 million still frames from film and television The BFI has co produced a number of television series featuring footage from the BFI National Archive in partnership with the BBC including The Lost World of Mitchell amp Kenyon The Lost World of Friese Greene and The Lost World of Tibet The BFI has also produced contemporary artists moving image work most notably through the programme of the BFI Gallery which was located at BFI Southbank from March 2007 to March 2011 The programme of the gallery resulted in several new commissions by leading artists including projects which engaged directly with the BFI National Archive among which Patrick Keiller s The City of the Future Iain Forsyth and Jane Pollard s RadioMania An Abandoned Work and Deimantas Narkevicious Into the Unknown The Gallery also initiated projects by film makers such as Michael Snow Apichatpong Weerasethakul Jane and Louise Wilson and John Akomfrah 13 14 The BFI also operates a streaming service called BFI Player This streaming service offers a variety of niche and art films 15 Organisation EditHistory Edit National Film Theatre The institute was founded in 1933 16 Despite its foundation resulting from a recommendation in a report on Film in National Life at that time the institute was a private company though it has received public money throughout its history from the Privy Council and Treasury until 1965 and the various culture departments since then The institute was restructured following the Radcliffe Report of 1948 which recommended that it should concentrate on developing the appreciation of filmic art rather than creating film itself Thus control of educational film production passed to the National Committee for Visual Aids in Education and the British Film Academy assumed control for promoting production From 1952 to 2000 the BFI provided funding for new and experimental film makers via the BFI Production Board The institute received a royal charter in 1983 This was updated in 2000 and in the same year the newly established UK Film Council took responsibility for providing the BFI s annual grant in aid government subsidy As an independent registered charity the BFI is regulated by the Charity Commission and the Privy Council In 1988 the BFI opened the London Museum of the Moving Image MOMI on the South Bank MOMI was acclaimed internationally and set new standards for education through entertainment but subsequently it did not receive the high levels of continuing investment that might have enabled it to keep pace with technological developments and ever rising audience expectations The museum was temporarily closed in 1999 when the BFI stated that it would be re sited This did not happen and MOMI s closure became permanent in 2002 when it was decided to redevelop the South Bank site This redevelopment was itself then further delayed Today Edit The BFI is currently managed on a day to day basis by its chief executive Ben Roberts Supreme decision making authority rests with a chair and a board of up to 14 governors The current chair is Josh Berger who took up the post in February 2016 17 He succeeded Greg Dyke who took office on 1 March 2008 Dyke succeeded the late Anthony Minghella film director who was chair from 2003 until 31 December 2007 The chair of the board is appointed by the BFI s own Board of Governors but requires the consent of the Secretary of State for Culture Media and Sport Other Governors are co opted by existing board members when required but if one of these is appointed Deputy Chair that appointment is subject to ratification by the Secretary of State 18 The BFI operates with three sources of income The largest is public money allocated by the Department for Culture Media and Sport In 2011 12 this funding amounted to approximately 20m citation needed The second largest source is commercial activity such as receipts from ticket sales at BFI Southbank or the BFI London IMAX theatre 5m in 2007 sales of DVDs etc Thirdly grants and sponsorship of around 5m are obtained from various sources including National Lottery funding grants private sponsors and through donations J Paul Getty Jr donated around 1m in his will following his death in 2003 The BFI is also the distributor for all Lottery funds for film in 2011 12 this amounted to c 25m citation needed As well as its work on film the BFI also devotes a large amount of its time to the preservation and study of British television programming and its history In 2000 it published a high profile list of the 100 Greatest British Television Programmes as voted for by a range of industry figures citation needed The delayed redevelopment of the National Film Theatre finally took place in 2007 creating in the rebranded BFI Southbank new education spaces a contemporary art gallery dedicated to the moving image 19 the BFI Gallery and a pioneering mediatheque which for the first time enabled the public to gain access free of charge to some of the otherwise inaccessible treasures in the National Film amp Television Archive The mediatheque has proved to be the most successful element of this redevelopment and there are plans to roll out a network of them across the UK citation needed An announcement of a 25 million capital investment in the Strategy for UK Screen Heritage was made by Secretary of State for Culture Media and Sport at the opening night of the 2007 London Film Festival The bulk of this money paid for long overdue development of the BFI National Archive facilities in Hertfordshire and Warwickshire citation needed During 2009 the UK Film Council persuaded the government that there should only be one main public funded body for film and that body should be the UKFC while the BFI should be abolished In 2010 the government announced that there would be a single body for film Despite intensive lobbying including controversially using public funding to pay public relations agencies to put its case forward the UKFC failed to persuade the government that it should have that role and instead the BFI took over most of the UKFC s functions and funding from 1 April 2011 with the UKFC being subsequently abolished Since then the BFI has been responsible for all Lottery funding for film originally in excess of 25m p a and currently in excess of 40m p a citation needed The BFI Film Academy forms part of the BFI s overall 5 19 Education Scheme The programme is being supported by the Department for Education in England who have committed 1m per annum funding from April 2012 and 31 March 2015 It is also funded through the National Lottery Creative Scotland and Northern Ireland Screen On 29 November 2016 the BFI announced that over 100 000 television programmes are to be digitised before the video tapes which currently have an estimated five to six year shelf life become unusable The BFI aims to make sure that the television archive is still there in 200 years time 20 The BFI recently announced that it is teaming up with American diversity and inclusion program StartWith8Hollywood founded by Thuc Doan Nguyen to make it global 21 BFI Chair EditGeorge Sutherland Leveson Gower 5th Duke of Sutherland 1933 1936 Sir Charles Cleland 1936 1937 Sir George Clerk 1938 1939 William Brass 1st Baron Chattisham 1939 1945 Patrick Gordon Walker 1946 1948 Cecil Harmsworth King 1948 1952 S C Roberts 1952 1956 Sylvester Gates 1956 1964 Sir William Coldstream 1964 1971 Sir Denis Forman 1971 1973 Lord Lloyd of Hampstead 1973 1976 John Freeman 1976 1977 Enid Wistrich Acting 1977 1978 Sir Basil Engholm 1978 1981 Lord Attenborough 1982 1992 Jeremy Thomas 1993 1997 Sir Alan Parker 1998 1999 Joan Bakewell 1999 2002 Anthony Minghella 2003 2007 Roger Laughton Acting 2008 Greg Dyke 2008 2016 Josh Berger 2016 2021 22 Tim Richards 2021 23 BFI directors EditJ W Brown 1933 1936 Oliver Bell 1936 1949 Denis Forman 1949 1955 James Quinn 1955 1964 Stanley Reed 1964 1972 Keith Lucas 1972 1978 Anthony Smith 1979 1987 Wilf Stevenson 1988 1997 Jane Clarke acting 1997 John Woodward 1998 1999 Jon Teckman 1999 2002 Adrian Wootton acting 2002 2003 Amanda Nevill 2003 2020 Ben Roberts 2020 present 24 See also EditBFI The Top 50 Greatest Films of All Time BFI 75 Most Wanted the most sought after films currently missing from the BFI archive BFI Flipside the DVD Blu ray collection dedicated to telling the alternative history of British film BFI Top 100 British films BFI TV 100 a list of the best British television programmes Fellows of the British Film Institute Cinema of the United Kingdom Independent Cinema in the United Kingdom Screenonline a history website run by the BFI external link below List of film institutes Association of European Film Archives and Cinematheques Sutherland Trophy annual BFI award for the maker of the most original and imaginative film introduced at the National Film Theatre during the year References Edit Charity overview BFI TRUST 1140833 Register of Charities The Charity Commission Retrieved 2 August 2022 British Film Institute Government of the United Kingdom Financial Legislation BFI ScreenOnline Retrieved 30 August 2022 Elizabeth II 18 July 1983 British Film Institute Royal Charter PDF Charity Commissioners for England and Wales Archived from the original PDF on 3 October 2008 Retrieved 6 October 2008 British Film Institute research project School of History Queen Mary University of London Archived from the original on 24 August 2017 Retrieved 24 August 2017 BFI IMAX BFI Archived from the original on 20 March 2021 Retrieved 12 March 2016 Britain s biggest cinema screen 20 m x 26 m IMAX 2D and 3D 70 mm and 35 mm film projectors citation needed Brown Mark 23 May 2016 BFI releases online film collection documenting British rural life The Guardian ISSN 0261 3077 Archived from the original on 20 March 2021 Retrieved 12 May 2019 Education and research British Film Institute Archived from the original on 20 March 2021 Retrieved 23 April 2008 Archived copy Archived from the original on 10 December 2014 Retrieved 23 May 2013 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Katy Rice Brighton and Hove to take leading film industry role The Argus Archived from the original on 20 March 2021 Retrieved 23 May 2013 Nothing to stop us now the BFI Film Academy s graduates British Film Institute Archived from the original on 20 March 2021 Retrieved 23 May 2013 BFI British Film Institute Archived from the original on 28 November 2019 Retrieved 13 April 2016 Fabrizi Elisabetta ed The BFI Gallery Book BFI 2011 Fabrizi Elisabetta Is This Cinema in Artists Moving image in Britain since 1989 edited by Balsom Erika Perks Sarah Reynolds Lucy Paul Mellon Foundation Yale University Press London 2019 Greatest global cinema on BFI Player player bfi org uk Retrieved 27 April 2022 British Film Institute GOV UK Government of the United Kingdom Retrieved 24 August 2017 Josh Berger to take over as Chair of the BFI Archived from the original on 20 March 2021 Retrieved 21 September 2016 Department for Culture and the BFI Agreement 2012 15 PDF BFI Archived PDF from the original on 20 March 2021 Retrieved 12 May 2019 Fabrizi Elisabetta Ed The BFI Gallery Book BFI 2011 Masters Tim 29 November 2016 Basil Brush and Tiswas among at risk TV shows says BFI BBC News Archived from the original on 20 March 2021 Retrieved 21 June 2018 Jones Monique Women of Color Unite Expands StartWith8 Mentorship Program To The UK Shadow and Act Andrew Pulver 22 December 2015 Warner Bros Josh Berger appointed chair of BFI The Guardian Archived from the original on 20 March 2021 Retrieved 10 March 2016 Tim Richards announced as new Chair of the BFI British Film Institute 11 February 2021 Archived from the original on 20 March 2021 Retrieved 25 February 2021 Ben Roberts appointed Chief Executive BFI BFI Archived from the original on 20 March 2021 Retrieved 26 February 2020 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to British Film Institute Official website Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title British Film Institute amp oldid 1128365937, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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