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BFI London Film Festival takes place from the 9th to 20th October 2024.
Discover the world’s best new films, series and immersive storytelling. The 68th BFI London Film Festival in London and around the UK.
The 12 days of the BFI London Film Festival are jam-packed with the world’s best new films, series and immersive storytelling – and you don’t have to work in film to be a part of it. This is your chance to delight in the undiscovered, as all feature films and series are being shown in the UK for the first (and sometimes only) time.
In London and around the UK. Join us in person at London’s South Bank and West End venues, or visit one of our wonderful partner cinemas around the UK.
LGBTQIA+ feature films at the 2024 BFI London Film Festival.
All Shall Be Well. Winner of the Teddy Award at the Berlin Film Festival, this touching drama follows a woman’s journey of resilience after her partner of 30 years dies unexpectedly.
Baby. Marcelo Caetano follows Body Electric with this dynamic exploration of São Paulo’s queer scene and the complex relationship between two men.
Four Mothers. Darren Thornton adapts Gianni Di Gregorio’s 2008 LFF winner Mid-August Lunch into a charming tale of one Irish son juggling four very different mothers.
I’m Your Venus. In this acutely moving documentary, the families – biological and ballroom – of Paris Is Burning star Venus Xtravaganza come together to celebrate her legacy.
Layla. The question of how love alters our identity lies at the heart of this debut from one of London’s best-loved drag queens.
A Nice Indian Boy. It’s impossible not to say ‘I do’ to Roshan Sethi’s delightful romantic comedy, starring Karan Soni and Jonathan Groff.
Queens of Drama. The brash love affair between a lesbian punk and a pop princess is the beating heart of this gloriously fun camp satire of pop fandom.
Queer. Luca Guadagnino and Challengers writer Justin Kuritzkes transport us to Mexico City in the 1940s with their adaptation William S. Burroughs’ semi-autobiographical novel.
Sebastian. In Mikko Mäkelä’s involving feature, a 25-year-old London-based writer begins a double life as a sex worker in order to research his debut novel.
Sex. Does a no-strings-quickie with another guy count as cheating on your wife? A casual confession is an explosive catalyst in this frank, thoughtful and engaging drama.
Three Kilometres to the End of the World. Emanuel Pârvu’s Cannes Queer Palm winner is an uncompromising and urgent drama that examines bigotry and the suffocating, often nefarious nature of small-town dynamics.
Viet and Nam. Trương Minh Quý’s achingly beautiful queer romance ruminates on ghostly spaces where personal yearnings and the suppressed collective psyche both dwell.
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