BFI Southbank programme for Sunday 29 November
- SpongeBob SquarePants Workshop
11:00 Foyer not available online
A special SpongeBob drawing masterclass, courtesy of Art You Grew Up With.
- SpongeBob SquarePants - The Year of the Sponge
13:00 NFT1 book
Featuring SpongeBob on the big screen, quizzes and hopefully a visit from SpongeBob himself.
- Fish Tank
14:00 Studio book
Wild teenager Mia is struggling to survive a claustrophobic home life with her neurotic mother and lippy sister
- Playtime
15:00 NFT1 book
Jacques Tati builds a giant cityscape set to illustrate the soullessness of modern architecture and modern French life.
- United Kingdom + Discussion with Producer Kenith Todd
15:10 NFT2 book
A prescient drama about a left-wing council removed from office for overspending on public services.
- The White Ribbon
15:20 NFT3 book
Michael Haneke's Palme d'Or-winning film explores a community shaken by a series of unexpected and cruel events.
- Henri-Georges Clouzot's Inferno
16:20 Studio book
In 1964, legendary French director Henri-Georges Clouzot started work on a much-cherished project, Inferno
- The White Ribbon
17:30 NFT1 book
Michael Haneke's Palme d'Or-winning film explores a community shaken by a series of unexpected and cruel events.
- La Forteresse
18:10 NFT3 book
A documentary portrait of a Swiss detention centre for asylum seekers.
- Hidden
18:20 NFT2 book
A taut, tense thriller exploring social and individual guilt and paranoia.
- Fish Tank
18:30 Studio book
Wild teenager Mia is struggling to survive a claustrophobic home life with her neurotic mother and lippy sister
- The White Ribbon
20:15 NFT1 book
Michael Haneke's Palme d'Or-winning film explores a community shaken by a series of unexpected and cruel events.
- Funny Games US
20:30 NFT3 book
A shot-for-shot English-language remake of the dark masterpiece Haneke made a decade earlier.
- And Along Come Tourists
20:40 NFT2 book
A young man goes to work at the site of Auschwitz concentration camp.
- Henri-Georges Clouzot's Inferno
20:50 Studio book
In 1964, legendary French director Henri-Georges Clouzot started work on a much-cherished project, Inferno


