The BFI Southbank is one of London's film temples, the British Film Institute's four-screen venue for screenings of new and old cinema. Which of these Film and TV Seasons for Summer 2017 would you most like to attend?
Dustin Hoffman: "Dustin Hoffman helped pave the way for a new generation of Hollywood leading men in the late 60s."
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Edgar Wright at an event for Baby Driver (2017)
Edgar Wright presents Car Car Land: "Director Edgar Wright curates some of the classics that influenced his latest release, Baby Driver (2017)."
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Guru Dutt in Thirst (1957)
India on Film, including a retrospective of director Guru Dutt.
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Gary Oldman in Prick Up Your Ears (1987)
Orton: Obscenities in suburbia: "Dedicated to the masterful Joe Orton, a playwright and author whose work was imbued with themes of sex, death and homoeroticism, and whose life was cut brutally short when he was murdered in 1967."
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Dirk Bogarde in Victim (1961)
Gross Indecency: "Uncover Britain’s pioneering, problematic relationship with on-screen homosexuality, 50 years since a human rights landmark (the partial decriminalisation of male homosexuality in England and Wales)."
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"All Quiet on the Western Front" Poster 1930 Universal
Refugee Week: "A nationwide celebration of the contribution of refugees to the UK."
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The Cinema Travellers (2016)
Bagri Foundation London Indian Film Festival: "LIFF offers a showcase of the best of new Indian independent cinema and a rare window into a billion lives."
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Daughters of the Dust (1991)
Unbound: Visions of the black feminine: "With the freedom to reflect their own lives, black women filmmakers pioneered their way to an extraordinary cinematic legacy."
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#10
Jean-Pierre Melville: Visions of the Underworld: "We celebrate a French director best known for his crime classics, who inspired the French New Wave, Jim Jarmusch, Tarantino and many others."
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Cerro Pelado (1966)
For an Impossible Cinema: Cuban Documentaries: "As Cuba’s hard-pressed revolution is poised for change, we look back at the documentaries and experimental films of the 1960s-70s."