Guillermo del Toro's Pinocchio
Guillermo del Toro’s Pinocchio

The 66th BFI London Film Festival will host the world premiere of many new titles in this year’s festival including the dazzling stop-motion animation Guillermo del Toro’s Pinocchio as well as Creature, a new collaboration between acclaimed choreographer Akram Khan and Oscar-winner, Asif Kapadia, and My Father’s Dragon, family animation from Award-winning Nora Twomey (The Breadwinner) and Irish animation studio Cartoon Saloon (Wolfwalkers, The Song of the Sea).

The Festival will present the claustrophobic whistleblower comedy Klokkenluider, the directorial debut of actor Neil Maskell (Kill List) which stars Amit Shah, Tom Burke and Jenna Coleman, and Welsh filmmaker Jamie Adams’ bittersweet part-improvised love story She Is Love, starring Sam Riley (Control) and Haley Bennett (Cyrano). Award-winning short filmmaker Dionne Edwards delivers on the promise of early work with her heart-swelling debut, Pretty Red Dress, which investigates Black masculinity and family dynamics. Other UK debuts launching at the Festival include: Andrew Cumming’s wildly inventive Palaeolithic low budget horror, THE ORIGIN; Fridjof Ryder’s dark thriller Inland, starring Mark Rylance and acclaimed British-Kenyan artist, Grace Ndiritu’s long-form debut, Becoming Plant.

UK Documentary cinema is also well represented with world premieres including the rapturous Name Me Lawand by Edward Lovelace (The Possibilities Are Endless) that explores the experience of a deaf Kurdish boy, If The Streets Were On Fire, an exhilarating portrait of London’s BikeStormz community which was featured in LFF’s Works-in-Progress showcase as part of UK New Talent Days 2021, and two new films Kanaval: A People’s History Of Haiti In Six Chapters and Blue Bag Life, produced by Natasha Dack-Ojumo, co-Founder of Tigerlily Films (BIFA-Winning company behind, Poly Styrene: I Am a Cliché). Yemi Bamiro also returns to LFF with his follow up to Michael Jordan portrait, One Man and His Shoes with Super Eagles ’96 about the Nigerian football team.

The 66th BFI London Film Festival takes place from Wednesday 5th October – Sunday 16th October, 2022.

FEATURE FILMS

GUILLERMO DEL TORO’S PINOCCHIO (dirs. Guillermo del Toro, Mark Gustafson, USA) – Carlo Collodi’s dark fable about a naive wooden puppet Pinocchio is presented in dazzling stop-motion animation by Oscar-winning director Guillermo del Toro and award-winning director Mark Gustafson.

CREATURE (dir. Asif Kapadia, UK) – Acclaimed choreographer Akram Khan’s new creation is captured
by Academy Award winner Asif Kapadia in the immersive and visceral CREATURE.

THE ESTATE (dir/scr. Dean Craig, USA) – Anna Faris and Toni Collette’s sisters plot to win the inheritance of Kathleen Turner’s cantankerous, terminally ill aunt, but find other relatives have equally devious designs on the family fortune. Crack ensemble also features Rosemarie DeWitt, Ron Livingston and David Duchovny.

BECOMING PLANT (dir. Grace Ndiritu, UK-Denmark-Norway) – the debut feature-length from artist Grace Ndiritu presents an inquisitive choreographic and therapeutic group experiment with psychedelics augmented by the soundtrack from multi-talented artist and musician GAIKA.

BLUE BAG LIFE (dir. Lisa Selby, Rebecca Hirsch Lloyd-Evans, Alex Fry) – Artist Lisa Selby’s audacious and deeply personal odyssey through love, artistry and selfhood illuminates the uncompromising and powerful BLUE BAG LIFE, a documentary portrait of a life touched by addiction.

IF THE STREETS WERE ON FIRE (dir. Alice Russell, UK) – Russell shows London from an exhilarating, rarely seen perspective. While knife violence rises, BikeStormz is a space of liberation and creative freedom for young people across the city to be free and express themselves.

INLAND (dir/scr. Fridjof Ryder, UK) – Ryder makes a striking, boldly cinematic debut with this intense puzzle piece, an intense thriller recalling Roeg and Lynch, and starring Mark Rylance in a story of a young man returning to his hometown in the wake of his mother’s disappearance.

KLOKKENLUIDER (dir/scr. Neil Maskell) – Combining pitch-black gallows humour, sharply amusing dialogue and perceptive characterisation, Maskell’s debut is an edgy and claustrophobic comic thriller in which a hapless government whistleblower and his partner hide out in a remote Belgian cottage, accompanied by two eccentric bodyguards.

NAME ME LAWAND (dir. Edward Lovelace) – Lovelace returns to LFF following 2014’s THE POSSIBILITIES ARE ENDLESS, here exploring the power of communication and community with a rapturous coming of age story about a young deaf Kurdish boy living in Derby in the UK.

PRETTY RED DRESS (dir/scr. Dionne Edwards, UK) – BRIT Award-nominated singer and West End stage
star, Alexandra Burke, stars this charmer that sees one dress change everything for a family in Edwards’ spirited, heart-warming debut.

SHE IS LOVE (dir/scr. Jamie Adams, UK) – Sam Riley and Haley Bennett shine as estranged lovers meeting a decade after their split in this intense and involving drama, from prolific Welsh filmmaker Jamie Adams’ (Black Mountain Poets, Bittersweet Symphony).

SUPER EAGLES ’96 (dir. Yemi Bamiro, UK-Nigeria) – Bamiro follows up 2020’s One Man and His Shoes with this engrossing history of the Nigerian national football team and its importance in the country’s political and cultural landscape.

THE ORIGIN (dir. Andrew Cumming, UK) – Bringing a whole new meaning to the term ‘period film’, Cumming’s Paleolithic low budget horror, THE ORIGIN, is a true original. Shot in the Scottish Highlands during the pandemic, this visionary survival horror is a masterclass in expansive world-building.

THE BLUE ROSE OF FORGETFULNESS (dir. Lewis Klahr, USA) – an exquisite collage film which manipulates fragments of comics, creating a narrative of unfulfilled romantic longing.

THE GIRL FROM TOMORROW (dir. Scr. Marta Savina, Italy-France) – Savina’simpressive debut is based on the true story of a young woman violently forced into marriage fighting for justice in 1960s Sicily.

THE BLAZE (dir. Quentin Raynaud, France) – a man and his father flee from a wildfire in this French eco-thriller that could have been ripped from the charred pages of this year’s headlines.

KANAVAL: A PEOPLE’S HISTORY OF HAITI IN SIX CHAPTERS (dirs. Leah Gordon, Eddie Hutton Mills, Haiti-UK) – Haitian history is presented through an explosion of colour, dance and music, as the country prepares for its legendary carnival.

MY FATHER’S DRAGON (dir. Nora Twomey, Ireland) – an irresistible animated fable from the award-winning director Nora Twomey and acclaimed Irish animation Studio Cartoon Saloon, about a boy and a young dragon stranded on an island full of untamed beasts.

XALÉ (dir. Moussa Sene Absa, Senegal-Ivory Coast) – Artist, musician and filmmaker, Moussa Sene Absa (Yoole, The Sacrifice) deliver a powerful female-centred revenge drama, XALÉ , which unfolds across two time frames and details the fallout of a devastating incident.

THE STORE (dir/scr. Ami-ro Sköld, Sweden-Italy) – this inventive and provocative social realist drama boldly uses live-action and stop-motion animation to explore what living in our zero-hours-contract, consumer society might look like in the very near future.

SHTTL (dir/scr. Ady Walter, Ukraine-France) – set in a Jewish village prior to the Nazi invasion of Ukraine in 1941, a filmmaker returns from Kyiv in search of his intended Bride.Walter’s striking debut, crafted as a stunning black and white ‘single-shot’ drama is in Yiddish and stars Saul Rubinek, Moshe Lobel and Antoine Millet.

EPISODIC

THE ENGLISH (Dir/Scr/Series Creator, Hugo Blick, UK-Spain) – Emily Blunt and Chaske Spencer lead an all-star ensemble in this sweeping tale of romance and revenge, a sharply crafted western series from award-winning television auteur Blick, made for BBC One and Amazon Studios.

A SPY AMONG FRIENDS (Scr/Series Creator Alexander Cary and Dir. Nick Murphy, UK) – this stylish new series from ITVX explores the events in 1963 following MI6 agent Kim Philby (Guy Pearce) exposure as a KGB spy in one of the most humiliating chapters of Britain’s involvement in the Cold War. Pearce stars alongside Damian Lewis (reunited with Cary after Homeland) and Anna Maxwell Martin.

MAMMALS (Scr. Jez Butterworth and Dir. Stephanie Laing, UK) – James Corden and Sally Hawkins star this a clever dissection of monogamy and marriage, written by Olivier and Tony award-winning playwright and screenwriter Jez Butterworth made for Amazon Studios.

XR

HAUNTED HOTEL: A MELODRAMA IN AUGMENTED REALITY (Lead Artist – Guy Maddin)

APPARATUS LUDENS (Lead artists – Untold Garden)

WALZER (Lead artist – Frieda Gustavs, Leo Erken)

LINE OF CONTACT (Lead artist – Dani Ploeger)

PAN + TILT (Lead artists – Ruth Gibson, Bruno Martelli)

INTRAVENE (Lead artists – Darkfield, Crackdown, Brenda Longfellow)

SHORTS

BUCKET IN THE FOREST (Dir. Blaise Borrer)

VISION OF PARADISE (Dir. Leonardo Pirondi)

JILL, UNCREDITED (Dir. Anthony Ing)

“U SCANTU”: A DISORDERLY TALE (Dir. Elisa Giardina Papa)

AS IF NO MISFORTUNE HAD OCCURRED IN THE NIGHT (Dirs. Larissa Sansour, Soren Lind)

BACK TO SCHOOL (Dir. Tyro Heath)

BLIND YELLOW SUNSHINE (Dir. Adonia Boucherhri)

DOWNSTREAM (Dir. Adam Kossoff)

FOR HEIDI (Dir. Lucy Campbell)

MARS (Dir. Abel Rubinstein)

MY EYES ARE UP HERE (Dir. Nathan Morris)

NANT (Dir. Tom Chetwode-Barton)

PRAM SNATCHER (Dir. Theo James Krekis)

ROARY (Dir. David Leister)

SILENCE (Dir. Arnas Pigulevicius)

SPINNING (Dir. Sam Spruell)

STICKS OF FURY (Dir. Yuan Hu)

SURPRI-! (Dir. Rory D. Bentley)

THE RILEY SISTERS (Dir. Julia Jackman)

TRANSPARENT (Dir. Siobhan Davies)

MONO NO AWARE (Dir. Quinton Kienow Dominguez)

ROSEMARY A.D. (AFTER DAD) (Dir. Ethan Barrett)

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