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September 5

September 5 (15)

Saturday 15 Mar 20252:30pm7:30pm
Monday 17 Mar 20252:30pm7:30pm
Tuesday 18 Mar 20255:00pm
Wednesday 19 Mar 20255:00pm7:30pm
Thursday 20 Mar 20253:00pm

September 5 unveils the decisive moment that forever changed media coverage and continues to impact live news today.


Set during the 1972 Munich Olympics, the film follows an American Sports broadcasting team that quickly adapted from sports reporting to live coverage of the Israeli athletes taken hostage. Through this lens, September 5 provides a powerful new perspective on the live broadcast seen globally by an estimated one billion people at the time.


At the heart of the story is Geoff, a young and ambitious producer striving to prove himself to his boss, the legendary TV executive Roone Arledge. Together with Marianne, a German interpreter, Geoff unexpectedly takes the helm of the live coverage.


As narratives shift, time ticks away, and conflicting rumors spread, with the hostages’ lives hanging in the balance, Geoff grapples with tough decisions while confronting his own moral compass. How do you cover a situation like this if what the perpetrators want is the spotlight you give?

Presence

Presence (15)

Saturday 15 Mar 20255:00pm
Monday 17 Mar 20255:00pm
Tuesday 18 Mar 20252:30pm7:30pm
Wednesday 19 Mar 20252:30pm

A family moves into a suburban house and, upon arriving at their new home, they start to suspect that they aren't alone, as a strange presence begins to manifest itself. Steven Soderbergh's first incursion into the supernatural horror genre, supported by a surprising script written by David Koepp (Stir of Echoes, Panic Room, Jurassic Park), which had its world premiere at the past edition of the Sundance Film Festival.

A Night with Janis Joplin

A Night with Janis Joplin (12A Live)

Sunday 16 Mar 20252:30pm

This multi award-winning show captured recently at the Sadler’s Wells Peacock Theatre is an extraordinary

musical journey paying homage to Janis Joplin and her biggest musical influences. Like a comet that burns far

too brightly to last, Janis Joplin exploded onto the music scene in 1967 and, almost overnight, became the

queen of rock & roll. The unmistakable voice, filled with raw emotion and tinged with Southern Comfort, made

her a must-see headliner from Monterey to Woodstock. Fuelled by such unforgettable songs as “Me and Bobby

McGee,” “Piece of My Heart”, “Mercedes Benz”, “Cry Baby” and “Summertime”, a remarkable cast and

breakout performances. A Night with Janis Joplin, written and directed by Randy Johnson, is a musical

journey celebrating Janis and her biggest musical influences—icons like Aretha Franklin, Etta

James, Odetta, Nina Simone and Bessie Smith, who inspired one of rock ‘n roll’s greatest legends.

The Apartment

The Apartment (12A)

Sunday 16 Mar 20256:00pm

C.C. Baxter is an office clerk who courts favour with the executives in his office by giving them the key to his small apartment for their extramarital flings. Among them is his callous boss, J.D. Sheldrake, who Baxter eventually learns is using his place to sleep with Miss Kubelik, the sweet elevator operator the clerk has loved from afar. When Sheldrake coldly dumps the vulnerable young woman, she tries to commit suicide in Baxter's apartment, giving the clerk the opportunity to save the woman of his dreams but possibly lose his job.


Restored in 4K by Park Circus in collaboration with Metro Goldwyn Mayer.

Romeo & Juliet ROH2025

Romeo & Juliet ROH2025 (12A Live)

Thursday 20 Mar 20257:15pm

Shakespeare’s great love story is brilliantly retold through this modern ballet classic celebrating its 60th anniversary in 2025. The fervent longing of the star-crossed lovers is perfectly captured by Kenneth MacMillan’s impassioned choreography. The flourishing of young love is just as present in Romeo and Juliet's meeting on the balcony as in their final moments when they desperately cling to life in the tomb.


Bring Them Down

Bring Them Down (15)

Friday 21 Mar 20252:30pm7:30pm

Because of his father’s failing health, Michael is forced to take more responsibility for the family’s farm. It draws him into a long history of conflict with a rival shepherding family, sparking a devastating chain of events. Andrews’ film is a gripping portrait of two men unable to break a generations-old cycle of harm.


Christopher Abbott and Barry Keoghan are outstanding in Christopher Andrews’ impressive debut, about two feuding farming families in rural Ireland.

The Last Showgirl

The Last Showgirl (15)

Friday 21 Mar 20255:00pm

A seasoned performer must plan for her future when her show abruptly closes after a 30-year run. Starring Pamela Anderson, Jamie Lee Curtis, and Dave Bautista.


Most films set in Las Vegas centre on the high-wattage neon glow of The Strip. But the latest from Gia Coppola turns that tradition around, showing us a story from behind the lights, with a captivating and affecting lead performance by Pamela Anderson.


Shelley (Anderson) has been a Las Vegas showgirl for over 30 years, the feather and crystal–adorned centrepiece of Sin City’s last remaining traditional floor show. The stage and the women she shares it with are her loving, bickering, sequin-clad family. When the stage manager Eddie (Dave Bautista, an island of masculinity in a sea of women) announces the show will close permanently in two weeks, Shelley and her co-workers must make decisions for their future. But the future looks different when you are 50 rather than 20, and your sole job skill is dancing.


Emotionally floundering, Shelley tries to reconnect with a daughter she hardly knows, which proves just as difficult as losing the only job she has ever had. Bolstered by her best friend Annette (Jamie Lee Curtis), a brash cocktail waitress who laughs a little too loud and too often, Shelley must find her place in a world that she shut the (stage) door on years before.


Coppola’s camera slyly but gently goes everywhere with her characters, capturing the childlike bewilderment on Shelley’s face as she absorbs news, and the heartbreaking compassion emanating from Eddie’s eyes as he delivers it. The director’s capable hand with a superb company of actors highlights the all-too-human sensitivities behind the harsh glare of those famous neon signs and stage lights.