BFI Reveals Three-Year Funding Strategy


The BFI today said that it will have access to £150m across the next three years (2026-2029) to invest in “UK Screen Culture” as part of its latest National Lottery Funding Plan. 

The £150m figure works out to around £50 million a year of National Lottery “good cause” funding, representing a theoretical 10% increase on the £136.3 million available over the last three years. 

The BFI has divided the cash among six funding strands: 

  • £33.5 million for Audiences
  • £13.3 million for Education & Heritage
  • £61 million for Filmmaking & Talent Development 
  • £35.55 million for Skills & Workforce Development 
  • £1.4 million for International 
  • £5.25 million for Insight & Industry  

The breakdown of these figures that will perhaps be most interesting for the industry is around Audiences. The £33.5 million figure includes investment in the BFI National Lottery Audience Projects Fund, which supports distributors, exhibitors, and festivals working across independent film and immersive. The cash will also continue to support the BFI’s Open Cinemas fund, which facilitates regular free screenings across the UK.

The BFI said the £150 million figure is based on projections of the good cause funding that will be available as a result of ticket sales across the next three years.

BFI Chief Executive Ben Roberts said in a statement that the funding plan aims to “ensure £150 million of good cause National Lottery funding over three years can have the greatest possible impact for the UK public.” 

“We are committed to nurturing filmmakers and creative risk-takers, developing the UK’s world-class workforce, inspiring children and young people, and connecting audiences to a more diverse screen culture – all driven by the ambition to deliver benefit to the UK public and provide support where there is an absence of sufficient commercial funding,” he said.

 “We believe the Plan responds to developments across the sector and learnings from the activity we have supported over the last three years and will contribute to economic growth while enabling cultural development and greater appreciation of UK screen culture.” 

Lisa Nandy, UK Culture Secretary, added: ““The UK’s film and TV industry provides a huge contribution to our country. It generates billions for our economy, employs millions of people and demonstrates Britain’s talents on a global stage. We welcome the news of this increased investment from the BFI and National Lottery with open arms. From actors and producers to cinematographers and VFX designers, this funding promises to nurture emerging talent and develop industry skills to keep our screen sector at the top of its game.” 

BFI-backed films this year include Urchin, My Father’s Shadow, Pillion, and Palestine 36.



Source link

How to Make Flu-Busting Elderberry Gummies

2025 Is the Year Late Night TV Fell Apart: A Complete Timeline

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *