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Looking back at the 35-year design evolution of BFI Flare Festival
For a landmark edition of Europe’s biggest LGBTQIA+ film festival, we speak to the BFI’s Darren Wood about the event’s creative heritage and Studio Moross Anna Czuż about this year’s identity.
Words
BFI Flare began life as a small part of the National Film Theatre programme in 1986 under the title Gay’s Own Pictures, and thanks to its success, it s grown to become a staple of the institute’s event calendar. Now Europe’s biggest LGBTQIA+ film festival and one of the world’s most significant queer film events, BFI Flare will this year, in its 35th edition, screen premieres of the best new LGBTQIA+ cinema from around the world among an exciting programme of 26 feature films plus a variety of shorts.
March 17, 2021 4:58 pm
The BFI Flare: London LGBTIQ+ Film Festival will return for its 35
th edition this week.
Taking place between 17-28 March, this year’s event will include 26 feature film screenings as well as a programme of shorts selected in partnership with The British Council.
Beginning in 1986 as Gay’s Own Pictures, by its third instalment the event was renamed the London Lesbian and Gay Film Festival. In 2014, the event was renamed BFI Flare to reflect the growing diversity of its content.
With more than three decades behind it, BFI Flare is one of the world’s longest-standing queer film events, and the biggest LGBTIQ+ film event in the UK. With its lengthy past comes a rich graphic heritage, perhaps best shown through its film and event posters.