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David Attenborough's Ocean

David Attenborough's Ocean (PG)

Monday 12 May 20252:00pm (Closed)
Wednesday 14 May 20257:30pm (Closed)

Join us in celebrating Sir David Attenborough's 99th Birthday in style with a global cinema release on 8 May.


The powerful documentary takes viewers on a breathtaking journey showing there is nowhere more vital for our survival, more full of life, wonder, or surprise, than the ocean.

 

In the film the celebrated broadcaster and filmmaker reveals how his lifetime has coincided with the great age of ocean discovery.  Through spectacular sequences featuring coral reefs, kelp forests and the open ocean, Attenborough shares why a healthy ocean keeps the entire planet stable and flourishing.

 

Stunning, immersive cinematography showcases the wonder of life under the seas and exposes the realities and challenges facing our ocean as never-before-seen, from destructive fishing techniques to mass coral reef bleaching.  Yet the story is one of optimism, with Attenborough pointing to inspirational stories from around the world to deliver his greatest message: the ocean can recover to a glory beyond anything anyone alive has ever seen.


Presented and authored by the world-renowned and beloved filmmaker Sir David Attenborough with 15-20 minutes of theatrically exclusive footage.


Tickets on sale from 4th April

The Accountant 2

The Accountant 2 (15)

Monday 12 May 20254:30pm
Tuesday 13 May 20254:30pm
Wednesday 14 May 20252:00pm
Thursday 15 May 20252:00pm

When her former boss is killed by unknown assassins, Treasury Agent Marybeth Medina (Cynthia Addai-Robinson) is forced to contact Christian Wolff (Ben Affleck) to solve the murder. With the help of his estranged but highly lethal brother Brax (Jon Bernthal), Chris applies his brilliant mind and less-than-legal methods to piece together the unsolved puzzle. As they get closer to the truth, the trio draw the attention of some of the most ruthless killers alive—all intent on putting a stop to their search.

Slade in Flame

Slade in Flame (12A)

Monday 12 May 20257:30pm

Described as 'the Citizen Kane of British pop movies' by critic Mark Kermode, Slade in Flame both confounded and delighted audiences when it was released in 1975, at the height of the legendary glam-rock band's success. Starring the band themselves, this was a music film like no other.


Charting the rise and fall of a pop group at the end of the 1960s - from bold beginnings in seedy clubs to booze-addled endings in spectacular stadiums - this darkly cynical, warts-and-all portrait of a band in freefall amidst the music-industry suits who want a piece of the pie, was not what anybody was expecting.


Acclaimed as a stone-cold bona-fide cult classic over subsequent decades, and boasting a razor-sharp screenplay, superb performances and a power-packed foot-stomping soundtrack, Slade in Flame has been newly remastered by the BFI from the best available 35mm materials for its 50th Anniversary re-release.

Four Mothers

Four Mothers (15)

Tuesday 13 May 20252:00pm7:30pm
Wednesday 14 May 20255:00pm

Darren Thornton’s second feature is a delightful and heartfelt dramedy about one people-pleasing son and four extremely demanding mothers.


Edward is a budding novelist and full-time carer to his bossy mother. Patient and dedicated, he fears leaving her to promote his latest book overseas. An unexpected complication will come in the form of three additional prickly mothers dumped on his doorstep by his friends when they trade Irish suburbia for the sunny delights of Pride in Gran Canaria. What follows is a hilarious weekend, punctuated by deeply moving moments.

Wind, Tide and Oar

Wind, Tide and Oar (PG)

Friday 16 May 20255:00pm
Saturday 17 May 20252:30pm
Thursday 22 May 20255:00pm

Wind, Tide & Oar is a compelling exploration of engineless sailing, shot on 16mm film over three years. The film delves into the experiences of those who travel solely by harnessing the natural elements alone, following a diverse array of traditional boats and uncovering the unique rhythms and motivations of engineless navigation.


Journeying through rivers, coastlines, and open seas, spanning the UK, the Netherlands, and France, Wind, Tide & Oar creates a contemplative space, addressing themes of ecology, heritage, traditional skills, and maritime history. Using a 1960s hand-wound camera, Wahl offers a poetic and intimate perspective on a millennia-old craft, upended by the invention of mechanised power.


Through the film’s reveries, sailing becomes a means to explore our interaction with and responsibility to the environment. It invites deep reflection on our relationship with nature, our understanding of and commitment to sustainability, and our care for the world around us.


The film is shot around Suffolk, Cornwall and Essex.



The Royal Tenenbaums

The Royal Tenenbaums (15)

Friday 16 May 20257:30pm

Screening in tribute to the late Gene Hackman


Royal Tenenbaum (Gene Hackman) and his wife, Etheline (Anjelica Huston), had three children—Chas, Margot, and Richie—and then they separated. Chas (Ben Stiller) started buying real estate in his early teens and seemed to have an almost preternatural understanding of international finance. Margot (Gwyneth Paltrow) was a playwright and received a Braverman Grant of $50,000 in the ninth grade. Richie (Luke Wilson) was a junior champion tennis player and won the U.S. Nationals three years in a row. Virtually all memory of the brilliance of the young Tenenbaums was subsequently erased by two decades of betrayal, failure, and disaster. The Royal Tenenbaums is a hilarious, touching, and brilliantly stylized study of melancholy and redemption from Wes Anderson.



Die Walkure ROH 2025

Die Walkure ROH 2025 (12A Live)

Sunday 18 May 20252:00pm

Love and death, gods and mortals, heroes and villains: it’s all here, in the thunderous second chapter of the Ring cycle. Following the glittering triumph of Das Rheingold in 2023, Barrie Kosky and Antonio Pappano plunge back into Wagner’s mythic universe. Christopher Maltman’s Wotan returns alongside an international cast including Elisabet Strid as Brünnhilde, Lise Davidsen as Sieglinde and Stanislas de Barbeyrac as Siegmund.


It has become the most performed opera of the cycle, loved and admired for its nuanced and intelligent exploration of complex family entanglements, expressed through music of astonishing power – perhaps nowhere more so than in the glorious music for the incestuous lovers Siegmund and Sieglinde.

The Last Musician of Auschwitz

The Last Musician of Auschwitz (12A)

Monday 19 May 20257:30pm
Wednesday 21 May 20252:30pm

How can there be music in the worst place in the world?


Told through the words of victims of Auschwitz who played and created music during the terrors of the Holocaust, this film shows how, in the most brutal and dehumanizing situations, music could be a lifeline, a way to give testimony, and even a way to resist. Woven throughout are new interpretations of musical works written by victims of the camp, mainly filmed at resonant locations in the environs of Auschwitz. Between them, they touch on themes of loss, longing, and cultural memory, and address head-on the barbaric and murderous regime at Auschwitz.

A New Kind of Wilderness

A New Kind of Wilderness (12A)

Tuesday 20 May 20252:00pm4:15pm
Wednesday 21 May 20255:00pm
Thursday 22 May 20257:30pm

In this Sundance-selected documentary, Englishman Nik and his Norwegian wife Maria attempt to forge a new life on a farm in her homeland’s lush woodlands. Their goal is to live sustainably, putting as little strain upon the planet as possible. But when the family suffers a tragedy, Nik’s resolve to continue on this singular mission is severely challenged and the ‘normal’ world comes knocking. Can they maintain some version of this idyll or is it a paradise out of reach?


Bearing comparison with the events of Captain Fantastic (2016) but played out with the complexities and inescapable truths of real life, A New Kind of Wilderness is not just a heartbreaking portrait of the endurance of a family, but also a breathtaking trip into the Norwegian wilderness. The kind of unfolding, surprising, intimate and honest documentary portrait that can only emerge over years of hard-won access,


A New Kind of Wilderness is for anyone who wants to (re)discover the power of family and think about different ways of striding this Earth.

Meet the Author: Alison Weir

Meet the Author: Alison Weir (12A Live)

Tuesday 20 May 20257:30pm
Alison Weir is the bestselling historian and novelist who has published almost 40 books, selling more than three million copies worldwide. She writes fiction and non-fiction and has most recently completed the highly acclaimed Six Tudor Queens series about the wives of Henry VIII.

She will be speaking to us about her latest novel, the surprising, compelling and fascinating life of Cardinal Wolsey - scholar, priest and politician, and close friend of Henry VIII.

Born in Ipswich, Wolsey had a modest upbringing but his flair and intelligence was quickly recognised by local schoolteachers and at just eleven years old he was sent to Oxford to study.

He went on to enjoy the world of academia but the church was the route he needed to pursue to achieve the power, wealth and influence he sought and, though he lacked a spiritual calling, he gained patronage from the Archbishop of Canterbury and then a place beside the King.

Wolsey came to be the richest and most powerful man in the land, but all the time he maintained a secret, other life.

Ultimately he was forced to make choices, and came to pay the highest price for his success.

The life and court of Henry VIII never fails to excite and fascinate and this is a fabulous tale of loyalty and friendship, wealth and power, deceit and compromise.

Alison Weir is a passionate and engaging speaker. Come and hear her talk about her research into Thomas Wolsey, her prolific writing schedule, and her desire to excite and inspire us with her biographies of the kings and queens through history.

Alison will be in conversation with Catherine Larner at The Riverside.

Early bird tickets are ?22 (including a copy of 'The Cardinal' RRP ?25) if purchased before 1 April.

After 1 April, tickets are ?25 (including the book).  One further ticket may be purchased for ?12.

Please include your surname when booking your ticket - this will be your reference when collecting your book on the night.
MI: The Final Reckoning

MI: The Final Reckoning (TBC)

Friday 23 May 20253:00pm (Closed)7:00pm (Closed)
Saturday 24 May 20253:00pm (Closed)7:00pm (Closed)
Sunday 25 May 20255:15pm (Closed)
Monday 26 May 20253:00pm (Closed)7:00pm (Closed)
Tuesday 27 May 20253:00pm (Closed)7:00pm (Closed)
Wednesday 28 May 20253:00pm (Closed)7:00pm (Closed)
Thursday 29 May 20253:00pm (Closed)7:00pm (Closed)
Friday 30 May 20253:00pm (Closed)7:00pm (Closed)
Saturday 31 May 20253:00pm (Closed)7:00pm (Closed)
Sunday 1 Jun 20252:00pm (Closed)6:00pm (Closed)

Tom Cruise returns to the role of IMF agent Ethan Hunt who is seeking the location of the destructive A.I. known as the Entity, a search set in motion by the events of the seat-gripping Mission: Impossible Dead Reckoning - Part I from 2023.


Tickets on sale from 28th April

Sutton Hoo Special Event

Sutton Hoo Special Event (12A Live)

Saturday 24 May 20259:30am

Screening of a Time Team Special, The Sutton Hoo Ship – Rebuilding a Legend, followed by a fascinating Question & Answer session with Helen Geake (Time Team) and Martin Carver (Emeritus Professor of Archaeology at the University of York).


We're delighted to share a brand new Time Team Special film presented by Sir Tony Robinson!


In 1939, on the eve of war, a huge ship burial was discovered at Sutton Hoo, Suffolk, laden with golden treasures, befitting Anglo-Saxon royalty. Now, a team of shipwrights and volunteers at The Longshed in Woodbridge are building a scale reconstruction, as acccurately as possible, using traditional methods.


Over the last few years, Time Team has been following the incredible building project, gradually watching the ship take shape. Join us for the story so far...



Michelangelo: Love & Death

Michelangelo: Love & Death (U)

Sunday 25 May 20253:00pm

Michelangelo - Love and Death offers a cinematic journey through the great chapels and museums of Florence, Rome and the Vatican, to the print and drawing rooms of Europe, to explore Michelangelo's tempestuous life. The film goes in search of a greater understanding of this charismatic and enigmatic figure, both through his relationships with his contemporaries and his ongoing artistic legacy.


The film invites audiences to intimately examine Michelangelo’s art and artistic process - from the Carrara quarries where Michelangelo sourced his marble, to the new technology being used to attribute works. The film also offers a rare chance to get up close to the mesmerising Rothschild Bronzes, which, following an extensive research project carried out by Academics in Cambridge in 2015, were positively attributed to Michelangelo after over a century of debate.


Key contributors to the film include art critics Martin Gayford and Jonathan Jones, Deputy Director of the Vatican Museums Professor Arnold Nesselrath and contemporary artist Tania Kovats.


Filming locations include Casa Buonarroti in Florence, Carrara marble mines, the Medici Chapel and the Vatican. These beautiful locations, combined with high-resolution views of Michelangelo’s greatest works, convene to create a staggering visual experience.