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- The Professor retires and moves back into his estate with his young wife, turning the lives of those who have been maintaining it in his absence upside down.
- A series of creative performance readings of iconic British novels. Each episode is directed by emerging talent from the New Creatives scheme.
- Dr James Fox examines the art and culture of Japan, exploring the links between culture, the countryside, urban landscapes and religion.
- Oscar Wilde is confined in Reading Gaol. His younger self appears, and the two men wrestle with the humiliation of Wilde's fall from celebrity to convict because he loved a man. The dialogue in the film draws heavily on Oscar Wildes own written word and famous quotations and as such the film can be viewed for much of it's running time as being in "his own words".
- Daphne Du Maurier, author of "Rebecca" and "Jamaica Inn," becomes attracted to the wife of a publisher and to an actress.
- When a lonely estate agent becomes obsessed with the perfect life of a charismatic social media influencer, the lines between the online world and reality become dangerously blurred.
- Inspired by a powerful involuntary mania that took hold of citizens in the city of Strasbourg just over 500 years ago, this film is a collaboration in isolation with some of the greatest dancers working today.
- Vogue model, artist's muse, fearless war photographer: Lee Miller had many lives. Built on images of Lee and by Lee, LEE MILLER - A LIFE ON THE FRONT LINE explores a pioneering female artist who broke taboos and defied expectations.
- Directed by Laura Fairrie and produced by the Academy Award®-winning Passion Pictures, along with AGC Studios, CNN Films, BBC Arts, and John Battsek, 'LADY BOSS: The Jackie Collins Story' takes viewers on an immersive journey through the trailblazing life of novelist Jackie Collins. Spinning together fact and fiction, this feature documentary reveals the untold story of a ground-breaking author and her mission to build a one-woman literary empire. Narrated by a cast of Jackie's closest friends and family, the film shares the private struggles of a woman who became an icon of 1980s feminism whilst hiding her vulnerability behind a carefully crafted, powerful, public persona. The film evolves from a celebration of Jackie's revolutionary novels - which placed female sexuality at the heart of their storytelling - into a multi-layered deliberation on feminism, family dynamics, and the universal quest to understand how our childhood experiences and early traumas ultimately make us who we are.
- London: The Modern Babylon is legendary director Julien Temple's epic time-traveling voyage to the heart of his hometown.
- In a world savaged by pollution, it would seem impossible to comprehend a day-to-day life, but somehow normality must continue on. We follow one man navigate his way through his daily shop.
- Broadcaster and journalist Samira Ahmed goes on a remarkable journey to places rarely seen, as she travels through Iran, telling the story of a complex and fascinating people, culture and history.
- A quirky tale about a man ignoring his problems as he slowly and literally drowns in them. This is a unique animation exploring the themes of procrastination, loneliness, stubbornness and lethargy. Created as part of the BBC Arts Talent Development series called BBC New Creatives.
- Art sleuth Waldemar Januszczak uncovers the secret meanings hidden within some of the greatest paintings by Van Gogh, Gauguin, Cezanne and Seurat .
- A year in the life of British playwright Alan Bennett as he's finishing the latest tome of his diaries for his publisher.
- The film looks back at Hockney's formative years in the British pop art scene and his experiences as a gay man.
- Created in partnership with the BBC and Rural Media, this is a striking adaptation of Damon Galgut's 'The Promise', directed by Christine Ubochi and starring David Jonsson.
- A documentary on the lives of the Bronte family produced to mark the 200th anniversary of Charlotte's birth.
- Charlie's bath-time is interrupted by some old friends who they haven't seen in years. Though Charlie is bitter about old history, their friends help them come to terms with what they've gone through and what it means to remember.
- A creative exploration and amplification of the COVID-19 pandemic as experienced through the eyes of Signkid, a deaf-rapper in London.
- James Fox investigates our complex and changing relationship with the image in the modern age.
- Rena attends a speed dating event where she meets an array of daters all with the same objective, to find a connection. Rena questions whether love and technology are a stairway to heaven or a marriage made in hell.
- Brenda Emmanus explores the art collection of Charles I, much of which is being reunited for a unique exhibition for the first time since his execution. Brenda hears the stories behind the works of art and learns how the collection was sold off by Parliament following Charles' death.
- Baritone Benjamin Appl and pianist James Baillieu make their own winter journey, reimagining Schubert's songs at the top of a mountain pass in Switzerland in a setting that emphasises the timelessness of the composer's music.
- Created in partnership with the BBC and Rural Media, this is a contemporary adaptation of Nadifa Mohamed's novel 'The Fortune Men', directed by Yero Timi-Biu and starring Elmi Rashid Elmi.
- Four young British art historians explore the BBC archives to discover how six decades of TV has influenced our understanding of some of art's most celebrated topics.
- Part of the 2021 BookerPrize shortlist film series, created in partnership with the BBC and Rural Media. Liam Young's interpretation of Richard Powers' 'Bewilderment', starring Luke Norris.
- A short, creative drama drawing on first hand testimony from a former inmate reflecting on the effects of being segregated in a young offender institution.
- Jonny is Deaf - his superpower is lip reading. But that doesn't mean everything makes sense.
- TV Series
- Sign Night is a poetic conversation in sign language between two star crossed lovers, projected onto buildings in central Bristol, U.K. The deaf performers share their dreams for the future from building to building, across the night sky.
- A teenager struggles to hide her scoliosis brace in an attempt to appear 'normal'.
- Art historian Alastair Sooke travels to America to discover what impact President Trump will have on American culture - particularly in light of his plans to eliminate all federal funding for the arts.
- What happens when your local playground becomes your local pub? Pie-eyed parents, lairy locals and awkward situations for a child in an adult world. Share a shandy with a pint-sized Pub Kid.
- Sapphire of the Valley follows a man who wakes up in a forest, an environment that is seemingly alien to him. He begins a journey through the forest following a mysterious loud cry. The cry is just one of the multiple ominous entities inhabiting the forest, which he discovers as he goes deeper into it. The film is an experimental portrayal of the anxieties of suddenly having to live as an immigrant. Attempting to examine the stages of emotions as the immigrant realizes that everything isn't as promised.
- Are we living a modern lie? In this extravagant satire, a mysterious carnival master walks us through the problems of our modern society, questioning the dangerous future we are building around us.
- Bridget Riley has been challenging our perception through painting for over 60 years, with radical work that has transformed how we look at art and invites us to feel with our eyes. With simple black and white geometric shapes, repeated curves of colour or an array of muted dots, Riley's work moves, shimmers and - in some cases - unsettles. At the age of 90, Bridget Riley shows no signs of stopping. Her paintings command millions at auction, she has won prestigious awards and honours, and continues to innovate, paint, publish and exhibit around the world. BBC cameras have filmed with Riley over the past few years in two of her studios, on the cliffs of Cornwall, where she spent the Second World War, and at the National Gallery in London during the installation of her enormous mural there in 2018. In a rare and revealing interview with Kirsty Wark, Riley dispels the numerous misconceptions which have followed her throughout her career. Many consider her as a poster girl for the Swinging 60s, while others hail her as a titan of abstract art. However, Riley considers herself a traditional painter who has merely picked up the baton from those who have gone before her, such as Leonardo da Vinci, Monet, Cezanne and Matisse.
- Four isolated residents of a seaside town connect with each other in an unexpected way.
- TV Series
- TV Movie
- Based on BBC's archives on the Island of Barra (Highlands, Scotland) and on footage made by Fowler. Folklore, withstanding expressions and ways of interacting, the presence of the rule, the game of possibilities beyond what's real. A somewhat magic realism.
- A suitably idiosyncratic adaption of Patricia Lockwood's 'No One Is Talking About This', directed by Liam Young, starring Fiona Button and produced by Rural Media in partnership with the BBC.
- Great Circle is directed by Christine Ubochi and starring Ria Zmitrowicz, taken from the novel by Maggie Shiptsead. Created in partnership with the BBC and produced by Rural Media.