Menu
Purchase
Savages

Savages (PG)

Friday 15 Aug 20252:30pm
Saturday 16 Aug 20252:30pm
Sunday 17 Aug 20253:00pm
Monday 18 Aug 20252:00pm4:30pm
Tuesday 19 Aug 20252:30pm
Wednesday 20 Aug 20252:30pm
Thursday 21 Aug 20252:30pm

Keria, who has Indigenous Penan heritage on her mother’s side, lives in Borneo with her father, who works on a palm oil plantation. News that the family home is under threat from deforestation only makes her more passionate about her environment, especially when she meets Oshi, an orphaned orangutan with whom she uncovers the joys and dangers of this threatened world.


Screened in the English dubbed version, no subtitles

The Salt Path

The Salt Path (12A)

Friday 15 Aug 20255:00pm7:45pm
Saturday 16 Aug 20255:00pm7:45pm
Sunday 17 Aug 20255:30pm
Tuesday 19 Aug 20255:00pm7:45pm
Wednesday 20 Aug 20255:00pm7:45pm
Thursday 21 Aug 20255:00pm7:45pm

What do you do when you’re in your 50s, lose all your worldly possessions and receive a devastating medical diagnosis? Potentially, you decide to walk the South West Coast Path – stretching from Minehead in Somerset through north Devon, Cornwall and south Devon to Poole in Dorset – a 630-mile trek equivalent to climbing Mount Everest four times.


Gillian Anderson and Jason Isaacs star in Tony Award-winning theatre director Marianne Elliott’s film debut as Raynor and Moth Winn, the couple who decided to travel the south west’s famously gorgeous rugged coastline in search of solace after a combination of crises in their lives, as captured in Raynor’s prize-winning memoir of the same name. Though emotionally and physically challenging, the journey also proves exhilarating and liberating, giving Raynor and Moth a renewed vitality and a deeper connection to both the natural world and each other. Featuring understated performances from Anderson and Isaacs and immersive cinematography and sound design, The Salt Path is an affecting, rewarding portrait of mid-life loss and rebirth.

Ran

Ran (15)

Monday 18 Aug 20257:00pm

Kurosawa’s late masterpiece adapts Shakespeare’s King Lear as a thrilling tale set in feudal Japan.


Drawing heavily on Shakespeare's King Lear and legends surrounding the 16th-century feudal lord Môri Motonari, Kurosawa took inspiration from the success of Kagemusha to broaden his canvass. Like Throne of Blood, at its heart Ran is a tale of family strife. But in its execution, particularly the stunning exterior sequences and its use of colour - as audacious as Teinosuke Kinugasa's 1953 classic Gate of Hell - the film plays out on an epic scale.