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Category: Editorial

The Hook opens the 2025 Bournemouth International Film Festival

The inaugural Bournemouth International Film Festival is opening with a bang — and with The Hook. This darkly comic whirlwind about a dysfunctional family band is making its world premiere on the South Coast, setting the tone for two days of screenings, talks and celebration of new voices in cinema. Directed by Thomas David Beatty in his feature debut, The Hook tackles themes of ambition, addiction and the fragility of success in the music industry, blending biting humour with raw emotion. With an impressive cast that includes Elijah Rowen (Vikings, Curfew), Jack McEvoy (Vikings, Ripper Street), and Mei Bignall (Penny Dreadful), the film promises to strike a chord with audiences. Ahead of their big night, we caught up with Beatty and Rowen to talk about the journey behind the film, the challenges of balancing comedy and tragedy, and what it means to open a brand new festival in Bournemouth. 1. The Hook is not only having its world premiere here in Bournemouth, but also opening the festival. How does it feel to be the film that sets the tone for the very first BIFF? Elijah: — Bournemouth’s coastal. Since I was a kid I loved the coast; it has always meant change, new tides coming in. I believe in magical signs, cosmic rhymes… The welcome we’ve had here; it’s put a bit of love back in me. Feels good. Tommy:  Completely agree with Elijah. Honestly, we couldn’t be happier. It came as a welcome surprise to the team and me. Especially with it being the very first year of the festival, it means even more. 2. The film dives into themes of ambition, addiction, and family dysfunction through the lens of dark comedy. What drew you to this subject matter, and why did you feel now was the right time to tell this story? Tommy: I naturally gravitate toward darker subject matter, even in comedy. The themes are close to me. I think it’s important to be ambitious, but for the right reasons. It feels like the right time because so many creative industries are at a crossroads right now.  3. Much of the film centres on a family band racing to write a hit in just 24 hours. Was that high-stakes, pressure-cooker environment something you always wanted to capture on screen? Tommy: The original concept came from Charlie Freeman, Jack McEvoy, and Elijah Rowen. They approached me with it, and I think the time constraints we faced while shooting the film actually mirrored the central point of a family band trying to write a song in 24 hours. 4. You chose JBJ Recording Studio on Portobello Road as a location, which has an incredible musical history. How important was that real-world setting to the authenticity of the film? Tommy: We couldn’t have made the movie without the studio. The space has such a strong energy as soon as you walk in. It’s crazy to think of the artists who’ve recorded there. We were beyond fortunate to shoot in such a unique location. 5. You have a cast with strong television and film credits – from Vikings to Penny Dreadful to Bridgerton. What did those performers bring that shaped the film in ways you might not have expected? Tommy: They really went for it. It’s a bizarre film in parts, but there was very little questioning of the world itself from the actors. That’s a testament to their professionalism and the trust they placed in me.  6. Thomas, this is your directorial debut after years working across stage and screen. What was the steepest learning curve moving into the director’s chair? Tommy: The sheer number of questions you’re asked. You have to have the answer—and the right answer at that. The clearer you are about what you’re doing, or at least trying to do, the more people are willing to give of themselves. 7. Music is at the heart of The Hook. How did you approach blending the film’s score and soundtrack with the story of fading stardom and creative burnout? Tommy: I was fortunate to know some incredible artists. Stereo Cupid, Sounds Mint, and Stone all added so much contemporary weight to the soundtrack. And of course, Gavin Friday’s “Lord I’m Coming” was a dream—it perfectly captures that cry to something bigger. Everything was pieced together and elevated by Ollie de Wailly, who is a real musical 8. Dark comedy often walks a fine line between humour and tragedy. How did you find the balance, especially when dealing with issues like addiction and mental health? Tommy: These are big issues, of course, but ignoring them—or not poking fun at them—almost makes them bigger. For me I enjoy seeing  audiences laugh at the darkest parts and cry at the funniest. I’ll borrow from someone wiser than me—Chaplin: “Life is a tragedy when seen in close-up, but a comedy in long-shot.”  9. The Hook explores the cost of chasing success. Do you see parallels with your own journey as filmmakers breaking into an industry that’s notoriously tough to crack? I remember McEvoy saying, after the final edit, “We have an extraordinary journey ahead.”I wanted to believe him. I did. But in this business… it isn’t only what you believe. It’s whether others believe in you. That’s what opens the doors. That’s what makes the journey happen. Tommy:  We both see the parallels, and try to steer clear of them. As you say, it’s tough, and it really is a journey—but it’s one we signed up for a long time ago. We’re very lucky to be able to do it. 10. Finally, what do you hope the Bournemouth audience takes away from The Hook, and what’s next for the film after its world premiere? Elijah: I believe in immersion. Acting..living.. It’s the same thing. This film gave me plenty. Left me thinking. I hope the audience feels a touch of that. And that said audience grows.  Tommy: Above all, I hope the audience enjoys it. It’s a film made for people to let loose

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Why Some Films Just Feel Better on a Big Screen

Why Some Films Just Feel Better on a Big Screen In the world of film festivals, the word “programmer” might not sound as glamorous as “director” or “producer,” but it’s the heartbeat of everything an audience sees. Every slot, pairing, and surprise moment is the result of thoughtful, deliberate curation. At BIFF, programming isn’t just about picking “the best” films. It’s about shaping an experience. And as we prepare for our very first edition, we’re making choices that reflect not just taste, but values. We’ve all done it, watched something beautiful on our phones while distracted by another tab. Or streamed a film late at night while half-scrolling Instagram. That’s modern life. But it’s also a reminder of what we lose when we stop watching with intention. Some films simply feel better on a big screen. And it’s not just about visuals. It’s about presence. The Screen Isn’t Just a Surface. It’s a Space. There’s a reason cinematographers still talk about “frame” like it’s a sacred word. The size of the image affects how we relate to a story. A vast landscape or a tight close-up lands differently in a cinema. It pulls you in. It silences everything else. The distractions, the notifications, the self-consciousness gone. That experience changes not just what we see, but how we feel it. “Some films don’t translate to small screens. And that’s not a technical failure. It’s a deliberate intention.” Steve McCarten, Festival Director We want people to come out of a BIFF screening and immediately talk about what they saw, not because it was loud, but because it landed. Curation as a Creative Act It’s Also About Who You’re Watching With The other part of the magic is the crowd. Whether it’s 30 people or 300, something happens when we experience a film together. Laughter lands differently. Stillness feels heavier. Even silence feels charged. It’s a collective emotional contract. A moment where strangers sync up and share something wordlessly. That’s hard to find in most parts of life now. And that’s what we’re bringing back at BIFF. We’re Curating With the Room in Mind Some films belong on the big screen not because they’re big but because they’re delicate. Because they deserve your full attention. Because they risk subtlety. Because they speak slowly and expect you to listen. Those are the kinds of films we’re building our programme around. Some will be bold, others intimate. But all of them are chosen because we believe they give you something you can’t get anywhere else, especially not alone, on your phone, between emails. This festival isn’t about nostalgia. It’s about reclaiming the act of watching as something active. Intentional. Collective. “A great screening isn’t about pixels. It’s about presence.” Steve McCarten So yes, some films do feel better on a big screen. Not because they’re better. But because we are. Buy Your Tickets Today! Submit via CenterFrame All Posts BIFF Judges Commercial Partner Editorial Hospitality Partner News Venue Partner Doctor Who actor named as patron of new Bournemouth film festival September 17, 2025/ Christopher Eccleston named as patron of new Bournemouth film festival Former ‘Doctor Who’ star Christopher Eccleston has been announced as… Read More Why Some Films Just Feel Better on a Big Screen July 7, 2025/ Why Some Films Just Feel Better on a Big Screen In the world of film festivals, the word “programmer” might… Read More What the Return of Costa Rica’s Film Festival Tells Us About Resilience and Reinvention July 7, 2025/ What the Return of Costa Rica’s Film Festival Tells Us About Resilience — and Reinvention As the Costa Rica International… Read More Load More End of Content.

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What the Return of Costa Rica’s Film Festival Tells Us About Resilience and Reinvention

What the Return of Costa Rica’s Film Festival Tells Us About Resilience — and Reinvention As the Costa Rica International Film Festival returns after a multi-year pause, there’s a quiet story underneath the headline — one about reinvention, leadership, and why festivals still matter. It’s not just about one country’s cinematic comeback. It’s about what happens when cultural events are treated as ecosystems, not just events. And for us at BIFF, still building our first edition, it’s a timely reminder of what’s at stake. New Leadership, New Era The appointment of María Lourdes Cortés as the festival’s new programming head is more than administrative reshuffling. It’s a statement of intent. Cortés brings decades of experience as a historian, critic, and scholar of Central American cinema — someone with deep roots in the region’s film identity. Why does this matter? Because programming isn’t just about taste. It’s about cultural memory. It’s about choosing what stories get centre stage — and what stories get reclaimed. “When you hand programming to someone who understands both the present and the past, you get more than a lineup. You get a vision.”— Steve McCarten, Festival Director Festivals as Cultural Archives Costa Rica’s return to the festival scene reflects something many of us feel post-pandemic: film events aren’t luxuries — they’re cultural infrastructure. They gather people. They reflect identity. They build bridges. And when those institutions pause or disappear, it’s not just a gap in the calendar. It’s a cultural silence. That’s why BIFF believes in long-term thinking. In building something that doesn’t just “run” once a year, but contributes meaningfully to how people in a place connect with cinema. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iJj7mnmxfZMhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EuZ1m_Uo9Hk Relevance Over Hype Costa Rica IFF’s reboot is grounded, not flashy. There’s no celebrity launch. No viral marketing campaign. Just a renewed focus on Latin American filmmaking and the rediscovery of neglected cinematic histories. And maybe that’s the point. At BIFF, we’re inspired by festivals that resist the noise and invest in relevance. The ones that ask: who’s not being heard right now? Whose work needs to be seen more than sold? “The best festivals don’t just premiere the newest film. They protect the ones that would otherwise get lost.”— Steve McCarten Setting the Standard from Year One A Model for BIFF — and a Reminder As we programme our first edition, Costa Rica’s return reminds us that festivals aren’t defined by how big they are — but by how deeply they’re connected to place, history, and people. Leadership matters. Taste matters. But above all, care matters. If BIFF can grow into a space that feels as necessary to Bournemouth as CRFIC is to San José, we’ll know we’re on the right path. Cinema isn’t just about what’s next. It’s about what still deserves to be seen. Buy Your Tickets Today! Submit via CenterFrame All Posts BIFF Judges Commercial Partner Editorial Hospitality Partner News Venue Partner Doctor Who actor named as patron of new Bournemouth film festival September 17, 2025/ Christopher Eccleston named as patron of new Bournemouth film festival Former ‘Doctor Who’ star Christopher Eccleston has been announced as… Read More Why Some Films Just Feel Better on a Big Screen July 7, 2025/ Why Some Films Just Feel Better on a Big Screen In the world of film festivals, the word “programmer” might… Read More What the Return of Costa Rica’s Film Festival Tells Us About Resilience and Reinvention July 7, 2025/ What the Return of Costa Rica’s Film Festival Tells Us About Resilience — and Reinvention As the Costa Rica International… Read More Load More End of Content.

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Bournemouth International Film Festival Programme

The Power of the Programmer: What We Look For in a Festival Film

The Power of the Programmer: What We Look For in a Festival Film In the world of film festivals, the word “programmer” might not sound as glamorous as “director” or “producer,” but it’s the heartbeat of everything an audience sees. Every slot, pairing, and surprise moment is the result of thoughtful, deliberate curation. At BIFF, programming isn’t just about picking “the best” films. It’s about shaping an experience. And as we prepare for our very first edition, we’re making choices that reflect not just taste, but values. Building a Line-Up with Meaning Every film in a festival programme should belong — not just because it’s good, but because it contributes to the overall conversation. It’s about more than buzz or box office. We’re looking for films that feel alive. Urgent. Films that carry a point of view. That doesn’t mean everything has to be heavy or political. It means we want stories with intention. Stories that leave something behind.   So what do we look for?   We look for honesty. A rough, raw short film that knows what it’s saying will always stand out over a polished one that doesn’t. We look for voice — not imitation. And we look for shape: how does a story hold itself from beginning to end?   “I’ve sat in screening rooms where something scrappy made me lean forward. That’s programming. It’s not about polish — it’s about pulse.”— Steve McCarten, Festival Director Festivals Aren’t Just About Films — They’re About Flow Good programming is more than selecting individual films. It’s about the shape of the whole festival. How one screening leads into the next. How a comedy short makes room for a meditative documentary. How late-night programming feels different from a Sunday morning retrospective. It’s also about giving audiences space to discover something unexpected — not just something familiar. https://www.youtube.com/shorts/rV9AZ88hC3chttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NAIGkDDvIpw&pp=ygUYZmlsbSBmZXN0aXZhbCBwcm9ncmFtbWVy We want people to come out of a BIFF screening and immediately talk about what they saw — not because it was loud, but because it landed. Curation as a Creative Act At BIFF, we believe curation is creative. It’s not admin. It’s storytelling. The line-up should reflect the year we’re in, the town we’re in, and the conversations we want to have.   This means our programming will never just be a list of crowd-pleasers or prestige picks. It’ll include bold work. Debut filmmakers. Regional voices. Shorts that hit harder than features. And yes — strange, hard-to-define pieces that earn their place by sticking with you.   We’re building a programme that’s textured. Surprising. And grounded in the emotional and creative energy of the South Coast.   “This isn’t about what’s trendy. It’s about what feels necessary. What deserves to be in a room, with an audience, on a big screen.”— Steve McCarten Setting the Standard from Year One For our first year, we’re not trying to do everything. But we are trying to do it with intention. That means each programming choice is a small signal: about what we want to say, and who we want to say it to. And we want to say, loudly and clearly, that BIFF is a place where brave storytelling belongs. We’re not just filling a schedule. We’re creating a conversation. We hope you’ll join it. Buy Your Tickets Today! Submit via CenterFrame All Posts BIFF Judges Commercial Partner Editorial Hospitality Partner News Venue Partner Doctor Who actor named as patron of new Bournemouth film festival September 17, 2025/ Christopher Eccleston named as patron of new Bournemouth film festival Former ‘Doctor Who’ star Christopher Eccleston has been announced as… Read More Why Some Films Just Feel Better on a Big Screen July 7, 2025/ Why Some Films Just Feel Better on a Big Screen In the world of film festivals, the word “programmer” might… Read More What the Return of Costa Rica’s Film Festival Tells Us About Resilience and Reinvention July 7, 2025/ What the Return of Costa Rica’s Film Festival Tells Us About Resilience — and Reinvention As the Costa Rica International… Read More Load More End of Content.

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Why Smart Brands Are Betting on Film Festivals (And Not Just Big Box Ads)

Why Smart Brands Are Betting on Film Festivals (And Not Just Big Box Ads) The smartest brands aren’t buying more ads, they’re buying relevance. In a world flooded with banner blindness, skipped YouTube pre-rolls, and endless digital noise, brands are waking up to something the indie film world has always known: story wins. That’s why more and more forward-thinking companies are shifting their focus from traditional ad placements to cultural partnerships with events like the Bournemouth International Film Festival (BIFF). Because when your brand shows up where stories are told, communities are built, and creatives gather. You’re not just seen, you’re remembered. Why Film Festivals Work for Modern Brands? Unlike big box ads that scream for attention, festivals create a space where your brand can integrate authentically into real-life experiences. You’re not interrupting content, you’re part of it You’re not chasing impressions, you’re building connection You’re not guessing who sees you, you’re in front of passionate, creative, culturally engaged humans At BIFF, we’re bringing together filmmakers, industry professionals, students, artists, and film lovers under one roof for a weekend of immersive storytelling, conversation, and celebration. And for brands, that means built-in audience, built-in relevance, and built-in content. Brands that show up in culture aren’t just seen… they’re remembered. This Matters More Than Ever The numbers tell one story. But human behaviour tells another. This graphic compares the typical outcomes of traditional advertising versus cultural partnerships. While traditional ads often generate higher impressions (i.e., people seeing the ad), they tend to result in lower engagement (clicks, shares, conversations, or emotional resonance). Cultural partnerships such as those with BIFF may reach fewer people overall, but the connection is deeper, more targeted, and far more impactful. For brands looking to move beyond exposure and into relevance, cultural partnerships offer a smarter ROI path. Today’s audiences, especially younger, values-driven ones don’t just buy products. They align with brands that align with them. They ask: “Where does this brand show up?” “Who do they associate with?” “Are they actually doing something cool or just selling to me?” Partnering with a film festival answers those questions in the right way. What Do Commercial Partners Get at BIFF? Commercial partners receive: Multi-platform media exposure (web, social, PR, digital trailers) Content creation opportunities (co-branded videos, interviews, activations) Onsite visibility with real-world interactions Audience alignment with a curated, film-loving demographic And yes, shared content you can use long after the credits roll Ready to Get More Than Just “Exposure”? If you’re a brand that values taste, creativity, and connection, we’d love to talk. Let’s build a campaign together that elevates your presence through culture, not clutter. → Request to download the BIFF 2025 Commercial Partnership Kit → Book a 15-Minute Call With Our Partnership Director – info@bournemouthfilmfest.co.uk BIFF 2025October 3–4, 2025 | Hilton BournemouthStorytelling. Culture. Connection. Buy Your Tickets Today! Submit via CenterFrame All Posts BIFF Judges Commercial Partner Editorial Hospitality Partner News Venue Partner Doctor Who actor named as patron of new Bournemouth film festival September 17, 2025/ Christopher Eccleston named as patron of new Bournemouth film festival Former ‘Doctor Who’ star Christopher Eccleston has been announced as… Read More Why Some Films Just Feel Better on a Big Screen July 7, 2025/ Why Some Films Just Feel Better on a Big Screen In the world of film festivals, the word “programmer” might… Read More What the Return of Costa Rica’s Film Festival Tells Us About Resilience and Reinvention July 7, 2025/ What the Return of Costa Rica’s Film Festival Tells Us About Resilience — and Reinvention As the Costa Rica International… Read More Load More End of Content.

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How Film Festivals Shape Film Culture – Even Before a Single Screening

How Film Festivals Shape Film Culture – Even Before a Single Screening When people think of film festivals, they often picture red carpets, packed screenings, and awards buzz. But long before the lights go down and the applause begins, festivals are already shaping the stories we talk about, the careers we follow, and the way we see cinema itself. In fact, a festival’s true power often starts months before anyone even takes their seat. Festivals Set the Tone for the Industry Look at the last decade of Oscar winners, critical hits, and breakout films. A huge number of them made their first impact at a festival. Whiplash, Get Out, Aftersun, Moonlight, Saint Maud, all of them started on festival circuits before reaching wider audiences. Festivals are often the first place bold stories get a chance to breathe. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yHtRhESo9Q0&pp=ygUVd2hpcGxhc2ggUSZBIHN1bmRhbmNl0gcJCd4JAYcqIYzvhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zOPWgLvJ8_c&pp=ygU8U2FpbnQgTWF1ZCDigJMgRGlyZWN0b3IgUm9zZSBHbGFzcyBvbiBMYXVuY2hpbmcgYXQgRmVzdGl2YWxz What’s more, festivals can give early indicators of where film culture is headed, not just which titles are strong, but which kinds of stories are landing. This helps critics, curators, and even studios take note. They Launch Careers — Not Just Films The right screening in the right room can change everything for a filmmaker. Festivals give exposure, yes, but they also offer conversations, contacts, momentum. A great festival moment can lead to distribution deals, industry buzz, funding for a second feature, or simply the confidence to keep going.   “Festivals are where films start to live outside of the edit suite. It’s where the story meets the audience for the first time. That energy is electric.”— Steve McCarten, BIFF Festival Director   Even for those not in the room, the ripple effects are felt. Think of a short film that finds a programmer’s attention, a documentary that lands a streaming deal, or a micro-budget feature that turns into a word-of-mouth hit. Festivals Curate the Conversation Part of what makes a festival so powerful is its point of view. Every programme is a statement  about what matters, what excites, what deserves more space. BIFF’s inaugural edition is about doing just that. We’re not only screening films we love; we’re building a conversation we want others to join. We believe in new voices, in unexpected stories, and in giving space to films that might otherwise go unseen. The best festivals aren’t just watching trends, they’re setting them. Buy Your Tickets Today! Submit via CenterFrame All Posts BIFF Judges Commercial Partner Editorial Hospitality Partner News Venue Partner Doctor Who actor named as patron of new Bournemouth film festival September 17, 2025/ Christopher Eccleston named as patron of new Bournemouth film festival Former ‘Doctor Who’ star Christopher Eccleston has been announced as… Read More Why Some Films Just Feel Better on a Big Screen July 7, 2025/ Why Some Films Just Feel Better on a Big Screen In the world of film festivals, the word “programmer” might… Read More What the Return of Costa Rica’s Film Festival Tells Us About Resilience and Reinvention July 7, 2025/ What the Return of Costa Rica’s Film Festival Tells Us About Resilience — and Reinvention As the Costa Rica International… Read More Load More End of Content.

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Snorkeling, Stillness, and the Power of Intimate Storytelling

Snorkeling, Stillness, and the Power of Intimate Storytelling Sometimes it’s the quiet ones that hit hardest. The first trailer for Snorkeling, the upcoming romance starring Kristine Froseth and directed by Emil Nava, has landed online  and it doesn’t shout. It leans in. Tender, seaside, and beautifully self-contained, the film is due out in July, and might just be one of the summer’s understated gems. What’s striking about Snorkeling  even from its brief trailer, is how confidently it occupies space. It’s not loud or fast or packaged with a viral moment. Instead, it offers something increasingly rare in a crowded release calendar: emotional stillness. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zCJPI6RJ4V4&embeds_referring_euri=https%3A%2F%2Fdeadline.com%2F&embeds_referring_origin=https%3A%2F%2Fdeadline.com A Romance That Remembers Reality Set in a coastal village, the film follows a woman returning to her hometown and rekindling an unexpected connection. The visuals suggest something tactile and deeply felt, more memory than movie. It’s the kind of story that trusts audiences to stay with it, not because of plot twists, but because of tone. For UK filmmakers, especially those working in indie or micro-budget formats, Snorkeling is a quiet reminder that less can be much more. A compelling location, a human core, and honest performances can carry more emotional weight than a dozen drones or four plotlines. Emil Nava Steps Behind the Camera Known for his work in music videos, Emil Nava moves into narrative territory here with what looks like a remarkably restrained touch. That crossover  from short-form visual work to feature storytelling is a space many filmmakers in the UK are exploring. It’s encouraging to see Nava treat the transition not with flash, but with focus. And for actors like Kristine Froseth, who’s carved a path through emotionally rich indie projects (Looking for Alaska, Sharp Stick), Snorkeling seems like a continuation of her ability to anchor a film through presence alone. What This Means for Festival Programmers For curators (including first-time festivals like us at BIFF), Snorkeling is a reminder that audience connection doesn’t require scale it requires sincerity. There’s a growing appetite for work that feels real, grounded, and emotionally honest. It’s also a sign that more music video or short-form creators might be ready to make their first narrative feature and festivals have a real opportunity to be their launchpads. A Moment of Quiet in a Loud Year As big studios ramp up content, and headlines swing between box office chaos and streaming deals, a film like Snorkeling makes its entrance with grace and purpose. It may not make a billion, but it might make someone feel something real. And ultimately, that’s what festivals and film are here for. Part of what makes a festival so powerful is its point of view. Every programme is a statement  about what matters, what excites, what deserves more space. BIFF’s inaugural edition is about doing just that. We’re not only screening films we love; we’re building a conversation we want others to join. We believe in new voices, in unexpected stories, and in giving space to films that might otherwise go unseen. The best festivals aren’t just watching trends, they’re setting them. Buy Your Tickets Today! Submit via CenterFrame All Posts BIFF Judges Commercial Partner Editorial Hospitality Partner News Venue Partner Doctor Who actor named as patron of new Bournemouth film festival September 17, 2025/ Christopher Eccleston named as patron of new Bournemouth film festival Former ‘Doctor Who’ star Christopher Eccleston has been announced as… Read More Why Some Films Just Feel Better on a Big Screen July 7, 2025/ Why Some Films Just Feel Better on a Big Screen In the world of film festivals, the word “programmer” might… Read More What the Return of Costa Rica’s Film Festival Tells Us About Resilience and Reinvention July 7, 2025/ What the Return of Costa Rica’s Film Festival Tells Us About Resilience — and Reinvention As the Costa Rica International… Read More Load More End of Content.

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Why Bournemouth Needs a Film Festival, And Why Now?

Why Bournemouth Needs a Film Festival — And Why Now In the ever-expanding world of film festivals, from the Cannes red carpet to backyard community screenings, it’s easy to ask: do we really need another one? But as Bournemouth Film Festival prepares for its inaugural edition, we’re not just adding another date to the calendar. We’re answering a cultural call and a local one at that too. A Cultural Hotspot Without a Cultural Showcase Bournemouth has always had the spirit. The coastline brings beauty, the students bring energy, and the creatives bring ideas. But what’s been missing is a shared space to celebrate that — a place where stories, screens and communities collide. Cities smaller than Bournemouth have long-established film festivals. So why has this town, with its blend of tradition and vibrancy, been left without one? The truth is, now more than ever, feels like the right moment. “I’ve worked in film and TV for over 15 years, I’ve seen how festivals energise towns and unlock voices. Bournemouth deserves that.”— Steve McCarten, Festival Director Film Festivals Are More Than Just Screenings At their best, festivals are platforms. Not just for filmmakers to share work, but for audiences to feel something new. They’re about the unexpected — a debut short that moves you more than a blockbuster, a post-screening conversation that stays with you, a venue that transforms how you experience a story. And for filmmakers? Festivals are where careers begin. https://youtu.be/svF-bsn-U7A?si=sK6WfTkCQDUdRbhThttps://youtu.be/lKxJKuw8deI?si=4VPJEBWQ4vSvWoCA We want BIFF to be that kind of space — surprising, nurturing, rooted. Creating Something Local and Lasting We’re not trying to be a carbon copy of big-name festivals. BIFF is designed around the creative energy of the South Coast. Our goal is to platform emerging voices, spotlight bold storytelling, and build bridges between local communities and international ideas. We’ll champion short films, debut features, regional talent and overlooked perspectives. We’ll host conversations, not just Q&As. And we’ll make sure every audience member feels part of something, not just in the room. This is about more than film. It’s about pride in place. It’s about seeing your town on screen and feeling it deserves to be there.”— Steve McCarten The Timing Is Right — And Overdue The last few years have changed how we gather, how we watch, and how we tell stories. Now, more than ever, people are seeking connection. BIFF is about providing that through film. Bournemouth has the audiences. It has the venues. It has the potential. What it needs now is a festival that ties it all together. We’re building BIFF from the ground up — for filmmakers, film lovers, and the future of storytelling in Bournemouth. This is the beginning. We hope you’ll be part of it. Buy Your Tickets Today! Submit via CenterFrame All Posts BIFF Judges Commercial Partner Editorial Hospitality Partner News Venue Partner Doctor Who actor named as patron of new Bournemouth film festival September 17, 2025/ Christopher Eccleston named as patron of new Bournemouth film festival Former ‘Doctor Who’ star Christopher Eccleston has been announced as… Read More Why Some Films Just Feel Better on a Big Screen July 7, 2025/ Why Some Films Just Feel Better on a Big Screen In the world of film festivals, the word “programmer” might… Read More What the Return of Costa Rica’s Film Festival Tells Us About Resilience and Reinvention July 7, 2025/ What the Return of Costa Rica’s Film Festival Tells Us About Resilience — and Reinvention As the Costa Rica International… Read More Load More End of Content.

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