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A Big Bold Beautiful Journey

A Big Bold Beautiful Journey (12A)

Monday 13 Oct 20252:00pm4:45pm
Tuesday 14 Oct 20252:00pm4:45pm7:30pm
Wednesday 15 Oct 20252:00pm4:45pm7:30pm
Thursday 16 Oct 20252:00pm (HoH Subtitled Screening)4:45pm

Some doors bring you to your past. Some doors lead you to your future. And some doors change everything. Sarah (Margot Robbie) and David (Colin Farrell) are single strangers who meet at a mutual friend’s wedding and soon, through a surprising twist of fate, find themselves on A Big Bold Beautiful Journey – a funny, fantastical, sweeping adventure together where they get to re-live important moments from their respective pasts, illuminating how they got to where they are in the present…and possibly getting a chance to alter their futures.


The latest spellbinding wonder from introspective filmmaking great Koganada (Columbus, After Yang), this mind-expanding romantic journey is a cinematic odyssey not to miss.

Strange Journey: Rocky Horror

Strange Journey: Rocky Horror (15)

Monday 13 Oct 20257:30pm

The son of The Rocky Horror Picture Show creator Richard O’Brien charts the journey of the sing-along cultural phenomenon.


Much like its protagonists, Brad and Janet, The Rocky Horror Picture Show has had a fantastical and surreal journey into the spotlight. It started life in an 85-seat studio space at London’s Royal Court Theatre, before being adapted into a breakout cult movie that would become a midnight screening favourite, with a near-fanatical fanbase and a host of rituals, fanzines and spin-off events. Linus O’Brien’s hugely entertaining directorial debut traces Rocky Horror’s journey across the decades, highlighting why it has such staying power. Featuring interviews with creator Richard O’Brien, one of the film’s stars, Tim Curry, and a host of artists, critics and fans, including Jack Black and Trixie Mattell, Strange Journey is a joyous testament to this 50-year-old classic.

Pressure

Pressure (15)

Thursday 16 Oct 20257:30pm

With a screenplay written by Horace Ové and fellow Trinidadian author Sam Selvon, Pressure follows a Black family in west London; from the parents who came from Trinidad as part of the Windrush generation with their first son, now part of the Black Power Movement, to their younger British-born son Tony (Herbert Norville), who is trying to find his place between the two cultures. As he leaves school and encounters prejudice on individual and institutional levels, Tony struggles to find acceptance in the country he grew up in yet has no Caribbean home he can dream of returning to. Unemployed and caught between an aspirational mother and a radical older brother, he drifts away from school friends and towards Black Power politics.


A groundbreaking and authentic exploration of the anxieties of an emerging second-generation of West Indians in Britain, Pressure (1975) is a significant title in the history of British Cinema, and remains as relevant now, 50 years on, as it ever was — with its themes of police corruption, discrimination and employment on an individual and institutional level.


Screening for Black History Month

One Battle After Another

One Battle After Another (TBC)

Friday 17 Oct 20253:00pm7:00pm
Saturday 18 Oct 20251:30pm
Few details have been made available regarding Anderson’s highly anticipated drama. It is believed to be a loose adaptation of Thomas Pynchon’s Vineland (the author behind Anderson’s 2014 satire Inherent Vice), and it features DiCaprio and an all-star cast in a tale about freedom fighters who resurface in US society to battle an old foe.
A House of Dynamite

A House of Dynamite (15)

Saturday 18 Oct 20255:00pm7:45pm
At a remote military outpost, an unidentified incoming missile is detected, setting in motion an escalating series of actions and reactions across all levels of the United States government. With her trademark dynamic kineticism, Kathryn Bigelow (Strange Days, Point Break) puts the viewer in the centre of a crisis in which decisions must be made in limited time, based on incomplete and evolving information and untested protocols. Bigelow and screenwriter Noah Oppenheim construct a frighteningly plausible scenario in which a multitude of dilemmas—practical and personal, bureaucratic and existential—overlap in real time and at a mounting rate. The film’s prismatic structure allows for a broad-scale thriller that entangles intimate dramas with an unfolding world-historic event.
The Titfield Thunderbolt

The Titfield Thunderbolt (U)

Sunday 19 Oct 20253:00pm

This warm and whimsical British satire is like a window on a bygone era. The first colour comedy from the famous Ealing Studios, it finds residents of a remote English village up in arms when they're told their train line is being shut down. In an attempt to save the service, the local vicar and squire devise a scheme for the villagers to run it themselves. The trouble is, the area bus company supports the closure and decides to sabotage their efforts - prompting the community to resurrect a vintage engine from the local museum.


Screening to celebrate the 200th Anniversary of the British Railways.



There's Always Tomorrow

There's Always Tomorrow (PG)

Sunday 19 Oct 20256:00pm

Join us for this rare screening and opportunity to delve into Douglas Sirk's masterful melodrama There's Always Tomorrow that explores the suffocating confines of middle-class domesticity.


Centered on Fred MacMurray’s deeply poignant portrayal of a husband and father who reconnects with an old flame (Barbara Stanwyck), the film examines the fleeting allure of escape and the crushing pull of societal expectations. This film’s richly detailed mise-en-scène as Sirk’s films elevate everyday objects—lamps, teacups, and furniture—to silent witnesses of emotional turmoil, amplifying the tension between characters and their environments.


The domestic items in There’s Always Tomorrow become more than mere set dressing; it serves as a narrative agent, embodying the constraints of suburban life and the unspoken desires simmering beneath its surface.


Screening as part of our short Melodrama season in collaboration with the British Film Institute