Re: BFI (British Film Institute)
Posted: Thu Nov 06, 2025 4:00 pm
Easy pre-order for the Wiseman set. Five 4K restored films on Blu-ray for basically the cost of what one of the DVDs on his website costs.
Which may well suggest that there's a rights complication. It's unlikely that home video rights would have been cleared back then (what with home video not yet being a commercial going concern), which means that such a release will almost certainly have to go back to basics and clear everything.Beloved Aunt wrote: Thu Nov 06, 2025 3:36 pm You'd think there might be at least a smidge of a reason to think a release of Alpha Beta might do alright, what with Finney and all.
I’ve always been interested in this title, too. I’m surprised that it didn’t get a rediscovery after Finney’s passingJSC wrote: Thu Nov 06, 2025 5:35 pm Many years ago now, I e-mailed the BFI about Alpha Beta but never got a response. Having read about it (and
being a fan of Albert Finney and Rachel Roberts), I would really like to see it. I've never seen it listed anywhere
(I think it had a limited theatrical release in America and a tv screening in the UK in 1974 and that's it).
I do remember that being shown, though didn't see it on either TV broadcast (1 January 1974 and 22 December 1974). It was made for the cinema and got as far as BBFC certification (AA) but failed to find distribution - it's 66 minutes long, which can't have helped - and so premiered on BBC2. (If memory serves, it did have a showing at the London Film Festival but I'd have to confirm that.) I'd certainly like to see it.Beloved Aunt wrote: Thu Nov 06, 2025 2:13 pm I wonder if BFI would be willing, or able ($$$, rights situation, etc.) to release Anthony Page's seemingly MIA television film-filmed play Alpha Beta with Albert Finney and Rachel Roberts? It's supposed to have performances from those two that are possibly the best of either's career.
2018... gosh, I looked so young then!Previous discussion of Alpha Beta in the "Lost Films" thread back in 2018

Stevie is fantastic. I saw it theatrically shortly after Jackson died. I think it might still be Sony, so hopefully it can be licensed to a labelcharal wrote: Sun Nov 09, 2025 7:14 am
Another rare VHS-only Jackson film is STEVIE (1978) where she portrays the great UK poet Stevie Smith. Is this due for a blu ray outing one day?
Interestingly, he has also said that he "can say with almost total certainty that these films aren't going to suddenly be re-released by another label in the UK on Blu-ray or UHD."Finch wrote: Sun Nov 23, 2025 3:19 am Ben Stoddart shared on Facebook 3 days ago that the BFI's Kitano collection is going OOP.
I belive this should be "Pink Narcissus". I saw the new restoration in Cinema ritrovato in Bologna last year. Looking forward to upgrade my DVD!
London, 14 May 2026 – The BFI reveals today its upcoming Blu-ray and DVD releases for July, August and September 2026. Highlights include acclaimed Cornish director Mark Jenkin’s latest film – a current hit in cinemas, the pioneering 1976 feature from Horace Ové and an infamous sci-fi oddity from Ed Wood.
27 July: ON THE BEACH on Blu-ray
Stanley Kramer’s ON THE BEACH (1959) is a haunting post-apocalyptic drama that imagines the final days of humanity after nuclear fallout reaches Australia. Released on Blu-ray, the film boasts a stellar Hollywood cast led by Gregory Peck, Ava Gardner, Fred Astaire and Anthony Perkins, and is one of classic Hollywood's most deeply affecting films.
10 August: THE MAHABHARATA on Blu-ray
Born from Peter Brook’s groundbreaking international stage production, THE MAHABHARATA transforms an ancient epic about two warring families into a cinematic masterpiece. Originally produced in 1989, this 2-disc Blu-ray set features the newly restored five-hour television mini-series version.
24 August: ROSE OF NEVADA on Blu-ray & DVD (Dual Format Edition) and MARK JENKIN – THE CORNISH TRILOGY: BAIT, ENYS MEN, ROSE OF NEVADA in a Blu-ray box set
Mark Jenkin's ROSE OF NEVADA (2025) stars George MacKay and Callum Turner as two young men who find work on a mysterious Cornish fishing boat. A blend of time travel, ghost story and social realism, all shot in Jenkin's trademark artisanal style, ROSE OF NEVADA is one of the standout British films of 2026.
Released alongside the feature is MARK JENKIN – THE CORNISH TRILOGY, a three-disc Blu-ray box set containing his 2019 BAFTA winner, BAIT, and 2022's folk horror ENYS MEN, alongside current hit ROSE OF NEVADA. The three films, all shot and set in Cornwall, demonstrate why the director has been acclaimed as one of the most distinctive cinematic talents around.
7 September: PRESSURE on Blu-ray and DANIEL FARSON’S GUIDE TO BRITAIN: VOLUME 2 on Blu-ray & DVD (Dual Format Edition)
Horace Ové’s pioneering debut PRESSURE (1976) explores the tensions facing a young Black British man caught between family, identity and political radicalisation. Showcasing the BFI National Archive’s recent 4K restoration, this is the first time Pressure has been available on Blu-ray in the UK. The disc also features Ové’s 1969 film Baldwin's N*****.
DANIEL FARSON’S GUIDE TO BRITAIN VOLUME 2 provides a second collection of innovative, important, eccentric, odd and outstanding work that the intrepid TV reporter created for Associated Rediffusion in the late 1950s and early 1960s. Farson's eclectic talent is reflected in an abundant array of hugely enjoyable, fascinating films on all manner of matters topical to a post-war Britain undergoing complex, seismic social change.
21 September: PLAN 9 FROM OUTER SPACE on Blu-ray
Ed Wood’s infamous sci-fi oddity PLAN 9 FROM OUTER SPACE (1959) blends aliens, zombies and flying saucers with boundless sincerity. Long celebrated as a cult classic, it remains an endearing monument to outsider filmmaking. Recently remastered by the BFI from a 35mm print held in the National Film Archive, this re-issue comes packaged with Wood's rare feature Bride of the Monster (1955).
These titles will contain a selection of extra features and an illustrated booklet (first pressing only) to provide contextual information.
Seconded - the old NFT and London Film Festival programmes are in bound volumes in the Reuben Library at the BFI Southbank. As you go in, they're in the far corner to the left. I know this, as I've been going through them during visits there. I've logged showings of Australian films from the start up to so far 1995. Maybe there'll be an article in it sometime.MichaelB wrote: Sat May 16, 2026 6:52 am At the BFI Library, definitely, but I’m not aware of anyone putting in the legwork of typing it all in for online publication purposes.
Not really essays, other than the short introductions to seasons and retrospectives. There are a few lines on individual films. There's usually a schedule calendar bound into the booklet, complete with the booking form you could send in with a cheque and a stamped and self-addressed envelope. Those were the days...senseabove wrote: Sat May 16, 2026 7:20 am Alas, that's what I assumed... How extensive are those older monthly programmes? Is it just a calendar, just capsule summaries, or do they have essays in them as well?