Culture Interviews Cinema & Tv Film festivals London Film Festival 2018

The Hate U Give premiere: On the red carpet with Amandla Stenberg, George Tillman and Angie Thomas at London Film Festival 2018

The Hate U Give premiere: On the red carpet with Amandla Stenberg, George Tillman and Angie Thomas at London Film Festival 2018
Avatar photo
Avatar
Shot by Marta Starczynowska
Sarah Bradbury Shot by Marta Starczynowska

On the penultimate day of the 62nd BFI London Film Festival was the premiere of The Hate U Give, George Tillman’s adaptation of the 2017 young adult novel by Angie Thomas, which follows a teenager (Amandla Stenberg) who witnesses the fatal police shooting of her childhood friend.

At the premiere, Stenberg stopped to tell us about the film, how she saw her character’s role and why she felt it was a crucial story to tell.

Director Tillman spoke to us about what inspired him to adapt the story for the screen and working with the lead actress.

The author Thomas was there herself, and discussed the relevance and importance of her novel and how it felt to see Stenberg bring it to life.

Sarah Bradbury
Video: Marta Starczynowska

The Hate U Give is released nationwide on  22nd October 2018. Read our review here.

Read more reviews and interviews from our London Film Festival 2018 coverage here.

For further information about the festival visit the official BFI website here.

Watch the trailer for The Hate U GIve here:

More in Cinema & Tv

Thunderbolts

Mae Trumata

British filmmaker Molly Manning Walker to lead Un Certain Regard Jury at 2025 Cannes Film Festival

The editorial unit

Prime Video sets May 2025 premiere for Nine Perfect Strangers season two with new cast and Austrian Alps setting

The editorial unit

New horror-thriller Weapons set for UK cinema release in August 2025

The editorial unit

“He’s stuck in between two chapters of his life”: Jan-Ole Gerster on Islands

Selina Sondermann

Another Simple Favour

Antonia Georgiou

Parthenope

Mark Worgan

“Every time I work with Gareth, I learn more about storytelling through action and action through storytelling”: Jude Poyer on Havoc

Mae Trumata

“I link the character’s body to my own so I can feel their pain”: Emilie Blichfeldt on The Ugly Stepsister

Selina Sondermann