An after-party at a London penthouse
The fifth instalment of an imagined story from the weekend – this time from a swanky apartment overlooking The Thames. How the hell did we wind up here?
The fifth instalment of an imagined story from the weekend – this time from a swanky apartment overlooking The Thames. How the hell did we wind up here?
The day-time party favoured by young British Asians first emerged in 1980s Britain. Last Sunday it made a comeback, in aid of the Covid-19 crisis in India. Meet the guests!
This autumn, cracking premieres, brilliant programming and top-notch talent are back in town.
“Could the 2011 riots happen again? 100%.”
Historian and local Richard Yeboah took lockdown by the horns to pursue his passion project. The Regeneration of Hackney: Transforming Modern Utopias is a detailed examination of gentrification in one of London’s most populated areas.
Director Alex Donaldson’s poignant two-minute film, The World Is Your Oyster, is released in tandem with London Challenge Poverty Week, giving young people the chance to reclaim their voice.
Dubheasa Lanipekun’s debut short – part of the BBC and Arts Council England’s New Creatives initiative – hymns the chaos of adolescence, Black schoolgirl sisterhood and her 15-year-old-self.
Ahluwalia, Art School, Saul Nash, Central Saint Martins, Matty Bovan, Molly Goddard, Bianca Saunders, Vivienne Westwood, Miles George Daniel, Burberry, JordanLuca, Simone Rocha, JW Anderson...
Coming soon to a screen near you, wherever you are, next month’s LFF offers visual thrills galore.
O tannenbaum, o tannenbaum, how lovely are thy spray paint…
As the (popcorn) dust settles on this year’s event, here’s our critic’s round-up of the films we didn’t have space to preview.
And that’s a wrap. As the curtain closes on this year’s LFF, here are the homegrown highlights to watch out for in cinemas in the coming months.
Get a glimpse of the warm, tight-knit community behind the contact-free deliveries.
After five years of presenting the house’s collections in Paris, Sarah Burton finds purpose in the city’s contrasts – hard and soft, fast and slow, sun and, well, pissing it down – to super cool effect.