BFI announces Cinematic Life of Boxing season at BFI Southbank

Feb 4, 2026
Michael B Jordan in a boxing ring
Creed will screen as part of the season (Credit: Park Circus)

The BFI has announced ‘The Cinematic Life of Boxing’, a season of films at BFI Southbank throughout April that “capture the essence of a sport that has been as influential on generations of athletes and fans as it has on cinema itself”. 

Screenings include Academy Award Best Picture winners Rocky (John G. Avildsen, 1976), celebrating its 50th anniversary this year, Raging Bull (Martin Scorsese, 1980) and Million Dollar Baby (Clint Eastwood, 2004), Best Documentary winner When We Were Kings (Leon Gast, 1996), as well as Body and Soul (Robert Rossen, 1947), The Hurricane (Norman Jewison, 1999), Ali (Michael Mann, 2001), The Fighter (David O. Russell, 2010), Creed (Ryan Coogler, 2015) and many more.

Dr. Clive Chijioke Nwonka, BFI professor in Practice, Associate Professor of Film Culture and Society at University College London and ‘The Cinematic Life of Boxing’ season curator, said: “Some of the greatest works of cinema have mined their themes and narratives from the drama, spectacle and unrivalled emotion of boxing. 

“Highly respected as a genre, these films continue to inspire generations of fighters across nations and identities with their compelling portrayals of the perseverance and human struggle associated with the sport.” 

“This BFI Southbank season brings together some of the finest examples of the boxing genre alongside hidden gems and underappreciated works that span drama, comedy and documentary,” added the BFI. 

“Together they explore how cinema, through the lens of boxing, has presented stories of love, triumph, personal struggle, racial injustice, politics, class identity, disability and the human spirit to cement boxing’s place in the pantheon of film.”

Launching on 31 March, the season kicks off with the world premiere of documentary Learning the Ropes (2026, cin. Morgan White) followed by a Q&A with director Ryan Pickard, narrator Ray Winstone and former World Champion boxer Darren Barker. 

Repton Boxing Club is recognised as one of the most famous amateur boxing clubs in the world, with alumni including Winstone, Barker, Pickard, Audley Harrison and former World Champions John H Stracey, Andy Lee and Maurice Hope. 

Through this candid portrait of Tony Burns, the club’s legendary former head coach, Pickard presents a singular account of his impact on the institution’s boxers past and present. 

Other events taking place throughout the season will include a Q&A on 14 April with former World Champion and Boxing Hall of Fame boxer Barry McGuigan, who famously trained actor Daniel Day-Lewis for his remarkable turn in The Boxer (Jim Sheridan, 1997), which will also screen on the night.

Plus, there will be a Q&A with actor and writer Johnny Harris on 16 April following Jawbone (Thomas Q. Napper, 2017), a Q&A with director Shane Meadows on 21 April following Twentyfourseven (1997), a Q&A with former boxer and renowned coach Jimmy Tibbs and his son, former boxer and now coach Mark Tibbs, on 28 April following Fighters (Ron Peck, 1991), and a discussion on gender in boxing with broadcaster and athlete Jeanette Kwakye and boxing writer Ruth Rapper on 15 April following Million Dollar Baby (Clint Eastwood, 2004). 

‘The Cinematic Life of Boxing’ is at BFI Southbank from 30 March – 30 April. Many screenings will also include introductions and more events are expected to be revealed soon, with further details to be announced on the BFI website.

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