Human Traffic in cinemas and on BFI Blu-ray and 4K UHD

❉ Now looking and sounding better than ever before, at the cinema or on BFI Blu-ray and 4K UHD.

Shaun Parkes, John Simm. ‘Human Traffic’ (1999) Image: BFI Distribution.

Newly remastered in 4K, back in cinemas after 26 years on 16 July 2025 and on UHD/Blu-ray on 21 July 2025.

The film that celebrated the rave culture of late 90s Britain and became a comedy cult classic of the ‘Cool Cymru’ era, Human Traffic, written and directed by Justin Kerrigan, with a cast including John Simm and Danny Dyer in his first film role, unapologetically partied hard into cinemas on 4 June 1999.  Now, 26 years later, it’s back on the big screen, still larging it amidst a completely different cultural and clubbing landscape, newly remastered and released in selected cinemas on Wednesday 16 July 2025 by BFI Distribution.

A preview screening takes place at BFI Southbank on Tuesday 15 July in NFT1. The re-release will be heralded by a brand-new trailer and new poster, to be revealed in mid-June. The worldwide first-time ever 4K UHD and Blu-ray collectors’ editions will follow on 21 July 2025, stacked with newly-commissioned special features and an illustrated booklet including exclusive new writing on the film.

Human Traffic: 4K Ultra HD (Also available on Blu-ray)

Human Traffic brilliantly and non-judgementally chronicles a wild weekend in the lives of five friends in Cardiff who dive headlong into the drug-fuelled counterculture of the British rave scene, escaping from boring 9-5 jobs, bad relationships, and dysfunctional families. Come Friday night, Jip (John Simm, Life on MarsDoctor Who), his bestie Koop (Shaun Parkes, The Mummy ReturnsSmall Axe: Mangrove), burger queen Nina (Nicola Reynolds, The MachineIdeal) man-hating Lulu (Lorraine Pilkington, Monarch of the Glen) and sorted cock-er-ney-sparrer Moff (Danny Dyer, EastEndersThe Football Factory), kick back for a 48-hour bender. These warm, fuzzy, charismatic characters park their problems to drink, indulge in a choice selection of illicit substances, kick out the jams, throw some shapes and dance all night.

The film’s exhilarating soundtrack, curated by Pete Tong and released as an album on 7 June 1999, includes tracks by Armand Van Helden, Orbital, Fatboy Slim, Lucid, Underworld, Peter Heller, Carl Cox and more. The main theme tune is Moff’s Lyrical Miracle Madness composed by Matthew Herbert and Robert Mello.

Original Theatrical Trailer (A brand-new trailer will be coming in mid-June):

Shot on location in and around Cardiff, including inside the legendary long-gone Emporium night club, the film’s powerful supporting cast boasts Jo Brand, Andrew Lincoln, Carl Cox and the mighty Howard Marks as himself. Low budget but technically adventurous, fracturing the fourth wall with direct to camera dialogue and fast edits, Justin Kerrigan’s exciting filmmaking style mirrored the energy and originality of its characters – and still packs a punch today.

Now looking and sounding better than ever before, at the cinema or on BFI Blu-ray and 4K UHD, Human Traffic is a 12″ white-label cult classic music movie serving up 99 minutes of nostalgic-1990s euphoria and ecstatic escapism from bleak modern Britain – for both the rave generation and a new generation.

❉ UK and Ireland cinema screenings will be listed here: www.bfi.org.uk/releases

❉ The UHD & Blu-ray releases can be pre-ordered now from usual retailers including HMV and Zavvi

❉ BFI Southbank screening tickets will be on sale here: www.bfi.org.uk


❉ News source: BFI Publicity.

❉ We Are Cult is not responsible for the content of this news release.

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