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  1. Our library at BFI Southbank is available to everyone, free of charge. It contains a huge collection of books, journals and digitised material about the world of film, television and the moving image.

  2. The BFI National Archive preserves and showcases one of the largest and most important collections of film and television in the world. You can explore, watch, license, book or research the archive online or at its venues.

  3. A new free-to-access digital archive exclusively available in UK public lending libraries. Discover thousands of digitised videos and television programmes from the 1960s to the 2010s, offering a glimpse into Britain’s past, its people and places. Find out more. The Greatest Films of All Time issue.

  4. Find out how to search across film and television information collected by the BFI since 1933 and discover the associated holdings from the BFI National Archive and the BFI Reuben Library. Learn about the types of materials, formats and sources available in the collections.

  5. Explore archive films. See shorts and features, showing the best from the BFI, national and regional archives - including 120 years of Britain on film.

  6. Discover more about film and television with the BFI’s diverse range of titles.

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  8. The BFI National Archive is a department of the British Film Institute, and one of the largest film archives in the world. It was founded as the National Film Library in 1935; its first curator was Ernest Lindgren.

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