We are revealing a new look for the 2026 edition of Glasgow Film Festival (GFF), taking place from 25 February to 8 March, which reflects GFF's standing as Scotland's biggest film festival. In addition, we announced the first films for the 22nd edition of GFF: the highly anticipated Retrospective Programme, which gives audiences the chance to catch classic films back on the big screen for free, and our Country Focus theme.
The full GFF26 programme will be announced on Wednesday 21 January.
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A New Look To Champion Cinema For All
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A preview of our new branding for GFF26 which will be fully revealed in the upcoming months.
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We are revealing a first glimpse of GFFs new brand today, built on our belief that films are best experienced together, and that Glasgow is the home for all film lovers – be they cinephiles or casual moviegoers, filmmakers or film enthusiasts. GFF is an international celebration of film known for supporting and championing new voices alongside showcasing the best new titles before their general release. Our new brand, by Glasgow-based creative studio Tangent, will fully roll out over the coming months and reflects the festival’s position as Scotland’s biggest and friendliest gathering for film.
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'Truth to Power': Cinematic Statements With Our Retrospective
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Robert Redford and Dustin Hoffman in All The President's Men. The film will
be showcased as part of GFF26's Retrospective series.
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Our GFF26 retrospective theme is ‘Truth to Power’, featuring 10 classics from the 1960s to the present day that stand as cinematic statements of resistance, or feature characters that rise against the machines of power. Highlights from the programme include Kubrick-directed satire Dr Strangelove (1964), where military blunders push the world towards nuclear annihilation, featuring comic genius Peter Sellers; Oscar-nominated civil rights epic Selma (2014) from director Ava DuVernay, which chronicles Dr Martin Luther King Jr's 1965 marches to secure equal voting rights; and the 50th anniversary of major political thriller All the President’s Men (1976), following the journalists who famously broke the Watergate scandal, starring and produced by the late great Robert Redford.
The lineup will also include biographical drama In theName of the Father (1993), starring Daniel Day-Lewis as an Irishman wrongfully convicted of terrorism who fights to clear his name and free his family; Steven Soderbergh’s dynamic crowd-pleaser Erin Brockovich (2000), which stars Julia Roberts in an Oscar-winning role as a law assistant fighting for justice for a small town devastated by industrial pollution; and Italian-Algerian war film TheBattle of Algiers (1966), a recreation of Algeria's 1950s battle for independence from the French government.
Paul Gallagher - Quote
GLASGOW FILM FESTIVAL
Head of ProgrammePaul Gallagher
“The idea for this year’s retrospective began as I reflected on the legacy and influence of the late
Robert Redford
. With his classic
All the President’s Men
serving as a starting point, ‘Truth to Power’ focuses on filmmakers who have taken on daunting targets – power, corruption and injustice – and created all-time classic films in the process; films that are not only hugely entertaining but retain sharp relevance to this day.”
Photography by Ryan Rutherford.
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To attend the free retrospective screenings, there is no need to pre-book; simply come along to GFT for 10.30am each day during the festival, pick up a free ticket and enjoy the film! Films shown within our Retrospective Programme may be subject to change.
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Say Hej To This Year's Country Focus
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We are celebrating our 22nd edition by spotlighting films from Sweden, with the Country Focus theme ‘Take a Chance on Me: Swedish Cinema’. A hand-picked selection will be showcased at our award-winning festival, including UK premieres of political satire Eagles of the Republic about an adored Egyptian actor who takes the lead role in a major government propaganda film; slick horror The Home where strange events unfold after the protagonist takes his mother into a care facility for dementia; and sci-fi Egghead Republic set in an alternative reality where the Cold War didn’t end.
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Embla Ingelman-Sundberg and Aviva Wrede in Live A Little. The film will be showcased as part of GFF26's Country Focus series.
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The UK premiere of female-directed drama Live a Little, which follows a young woman’s exploration of her boundaries on an interrailing trip after she wakes up in a man’s bed with no memory of the night before; and the Scottish premiere of the unique and visually stunning Redoubt, about a farmhand who builds a fortress in his home during the Cold War, are also announced today.
Tickets for the Country Focus titles will go on sale with the full GFF26 programme in January.
At Glasgow Film, we are a charity that runs GFF, Scotland’s flagship film festival, and also operates Glasgow Film Theatre. Glasgow Film Festival is made possible by support from Screen Scotland, National Lottery funding, and Glasgow Life.
GFF25 welcomed a host of huge film stars to the city, including James McAvoy, Toni Colette, Jessica Lange, Ed Harris, and Tim Roth. Our GFF In Conversation series and other festival content can be accessed via our Linktree.