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Who was Frida Kahlo? Everyone knows her, but who was the woman behind the bright colours, the big brows, and the floral crowns? Take a journey through the life of a true icon, discover her art, and uncover the truth behind her often turbulent life.
Making use of the latest technology, we take an indepth look at key works throughout her career. Using letter Kahlo wrote to guide us, this definitive film reveals her deepest emotions and unlocks the secrets and symbolism contained within her art.
Exhibition on Screen's trademark combination of interviews, commentary, and a detailed exploration of her art delivers a treasure trove of colour and a feast of vibrancy. This personal and intimate film offers privileged access to her works, and highlights the source of her feverish creativity, her resilience, and her unmatched lust for life, politics, men, and women.
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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
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.
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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?
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Nicola Coughlan (Bridgerton) joins Éanna Hardwicke (The Sixth Commandment) and Siobhán McSweeney (Derry Girls) in John Millington Synge’s riveting play of youth and self-discovery.
Pegeen Flaherty’s life is turned upside down when a young man walks into her pub claiming that he’s killed his father. Instead of being shunned, the killer becomes a local hero and begins to win hearts, that is until a second man unexpectedly arrives on the scene…
Filmed live on stage at the National Theatre, Caitríona McLaughlin directs this darkly funny tale full to the brim with secrets.
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Two of Britain’s greatest painters, J.M.W. Turner and John Constable were also the greatest of rivals. Born within a year of each other, both used landscape painting to reflect the changing world around them.
Tate Britain is bringing these two greats together for a groundbreaking exhibition, in London from November 2025 to April 2026, and Exhibition on Screen once again has exclusive and privileged access to bring their extraordinary art and remarkable stories to the big screen in March 2026 so that both can be enjoyed together. Don’t miss this opportunity to see these greats side-by-side, as they so often were in life, on the big screen for the first time.
Turner’s blazing sunsets and sublime scenes from his travels and Constable’s idealised depictions of beloved places from home whipped the public of the time into a frenzy of enthusiasm. Critics compared their starkly different styles to a clash of ‘fire and water’. Marking 250 years since their births, this unmissable new documentary explores Turner and Constable’s intertwined lives and legacies alongside the groundbreaking Tate exhibition. Discover unexpected sides to both artists with intimate views of sketchbooks and personal items and insights from leading experts. This is not to be missed.
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A drought in 1970s Southern California has an unexpected side effect: as people empty their swimming pools, a group of teen surfers from the Dogtown area of Venice Beach move in with skateboards, and a new sport is born. Based on a true story, this film follows "Z-Boys" skate team members Stacy Peralta (John Robinson), Tony Alva (Victor Rasuk) and Jay Adams (Emile Hirsch), plus manager Skip Engblom (Heath Ledger), as their fearless "pool surfing" leads to fame, fortune -- and misfortune.
Screening as part of our Skate Film Festival in collaboration with Two Toed Skateboards and Woodbridge Town Council
Each film is £6 or select a seat for all three films for £15
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Three young men bond together to escape volatile families in their Rust Belt hometown. As they face adult responsibilities, unexpected revelations threaten their decade-long friendship.
Bing Liu's Academy Award®-nominated documentary Minding the Gap is a coming-of-age saga drawing on over 12 years of footage in his Rust Belt hometown hit hard by decades of recession. In his quest to understand why so many of his peers in the skateboarding community ran away from home when they were younger, Bing follows 23-year-old Zack as he becomes a father and 17-year-old Keire as he gets his first job. As the story unfolds, Bing is thrust into the middle of Zack's tumultuous relationship with his girlfriend and Keire's inner struggles with racial identity and his deceased father. As we watch the boys grow up before our eyes, we experience the joy, sacrifice, and hope in the gap between childhood and adulthood.
Screening as part of our Skate Film Festival in collaboration with Two Toed Skateboards and Woodbridge Town Council
Each film is £6 or select a seat for all three films for £15
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In 1996, 13 year-old Stevie finds an escape from his troubled home life in Los Angeles when he befriends a group of teenage boys at a skate shop and decides to become a skateboarder. Despite his inexperience, the four other boys take him in and Stevie responds positively, eager to please the young rebels. Together they roam around the neighbourhood causing trouble and mischief, aiming to stay out as long as they can to avoid the difficulties that await them at home. In Stevie’s case, his older brother Ian is violent and his single mother Dabney becomes worried of the effect his new friends are having on him as he encounters a number of new experiences. ‘Mid90s’ is an expressive coming-of-age film from first-time director Jonah Hill with a pulsating soundtrack which explores serious themes such as mental health, addiction and abuse.
Screening as part of our Skate Film Festival in collaboration with Two Toed Skateboards and Woodbridge Town Council
Each film is £6 or select a seat for all three films for £15
The
Riverside Musical Theatre Company are back on the Riverside stage this June
with the fabulous 9 to 5 to Musical, the hilarious and empowering story where three
unlikely friends take control of their office and learn there is nothing they
can't do, even in a man's world !
9
To 5 The Musical, with music and lyrics by Dolly Parton and book by Patricia
Resnick, is based on the seminal 1980 hit movie. Set in the late 1970s this
hilarious story of friendship and revenge in the Rolodex era is outrageous,
thought-provoking, and even a little romantic.
Pushed
to the boiling point, three female co-workers concoct a plan to get even with
the sexist, egotistical, lying, hypocritical bigot they call their boss. In a
hilarious turn of events, Violet, Judy and Doralee live out their wildest
fantasy - giving their boss the boot! While Hart remains "otherwise
engaged," the women give their workplace a dream makeover, taking control
of the company that had always kept them down. Hey, a girl can scheme, can't
she?
A
high-energy show with its jubilant score and easily relatable characters, 9 to
5 is the perfect production for this talented cast and a night at The Riverside
you simply won’t want to miss !!
RMTC Creative team
Director and Choreographer - Sam
De Vita
Musical Directors - Mike Wren
and Jade Tournay-Godfrey
Executive Producer - Michael
Warden
Assistants to the Director -
Rachel Lansdowne and Lorraine Woodgate
This amateur production is
presented by arrangement with Music Theatre International
All authorised performance
materials are also supplied by MTI www.mtishows.co.uk
Based on the 20th Century Fox
Picture.
Music and Lyrics by
Dolly Parton
Book by
Patricia Resnick
Originally produced on Broadway
by Robert Greenblatt, April 2009
RMTC have chosen two very
personal charities for this production - HSP (Hereditary Spastic Paraplegia)
and The Firefighters Charity.
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Please note that this is a private screening for members of Woodbridge Film Society and not open to the public. If you wish to join the Film Society then please visit their page here
The impressive directorial feature debut of Laura Carreira is a powerful account of the gig economy and the loneliness of working-class immigrants caught up in it. Portuguese worker Aurora is employed by a Scottish fulfilment warehouse, endlessly pacing down aisles and pulling items from shelves to be shipped out to online shoppers. While her shifts are long and her productivity is constantly monitored, her wages are minimal and she can barely afford to eat. Her gruelling days are punctuated by a few precious moments of connection, especially when her busy lodgings welcomes a new Polish flatmate. Carreira’s skilfully directed and heartbreaking portrait of an isolated woman on the cusp of unravelling is gripping. With shades of Chantal Akerman’s Jeanne Dielman and the indelible spirit of Ken Loach, On Falling is a rage against the capitalist machine, and a very worthy winner of the Sutherland Award for Best First Feature at the 2024 BFI London Film Festival.