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Super Mario Galaxy Movie

Super Mario Galaxy Movie (PG)

Monday 25 May 20262:30pm
Tuesday 26 May 20262:30pm
Wednesday 27 May 20262:30pm

After the Super Mario Bros. Movie landed on our screens in 2023 we can’t wait for the brothers’ return. Get ready for new worlds and new friends as Mario, Luigi, Princess Peach and Toad are joined by long-awaited favourites Yoshi and Rosalina on an outer-space adventure to face off against Bowser Jr., venturing into space, exploring cosmic worlds and tackling galactic challenges far from the familiar Mushroom Kingdom.


Gaming and Super Mario Bros. has been a beloved pastime for many generations since the original Nintendo game of the same name launched in 1985, and The Super Mario Galaxy Movie is suited for both younger audiences and the young at heart, as well as the slightly nostalgic

The Christophers

The Christophers (15)

Monday 25 May 20265:00pm (Closed)
Tuesday 26 May 20265:00pm (Closed)7:30pm (Closed)
Wednesday 27 May 20265:00pm (Closed)7:30pm (Closed)

Lori (Coel) divides her time between freelance art restoration and work in a food truck. Her lacklustre fortunes change when she’s approached by the estranged heirs (Gunning, Corden) of brilliant painter Julian Sklar (McKellen) with an exciting proposition: Lori will steal a series of long-abandoned paintings (‘The Christophers’) from Sklar’s London home, complete them and reap a third of the profits once the paintings are sold after Sklar’s imminent death. What could possibly go wrong?


Brilliantly scripted by Ed Solomon, blisteringly performed by an acerbic McKellen and a cagey Coel, The Christophers is a witty, exhilarating and complex new offering from Soderbergh that serves up thorny truths about youth and old age, artistic integrity and legacy.

Our Land

Our Land (12A)

Monday 25 May 20267:30pm

This thoughtful documentary examines issues around public access to land in England.


92% of the English countryside is without legal public access. Through organised “mass trespass” events, Right to Roam seeks to extend this, but often clashes with landowners. This documentary gives voice to both sides: prominent land authors, Nick Hayes and Guy Shrubsole, as well as landowners defending their custodianship. It examines complex issues of access, conservation, and longstanding property rights that have shaped the English landscape for over a thousand years.


Ultimately, it asks the provocative question: who truly has the right to roam?