For trailers please click on each film's picture
6 Feb The Great Escaper
Oliver Parker / UK 2023 / 97 min / Cert 12A
Michael Caine and the late Glenda Jackson give terrific performances in this poignant and thought-provoking film based on a true-life story. 89-year old navy war veteran Bernie absconds from his care home to join fellow veterans to celebrate the 70th anniversary of the D-Day Normandy Landings. We join him on his journey as he reflects on his guilt at surviving the war, when so many of his comrades perished. There is humour in the attempts by Bernie’s wife (Jackson), to cover up his escape. However, the film may leave you with a tear in your eye but there is ‘a huge amount to enjoy from these legendary performers’ (Guardian)
27 Feb Dream Scenario
Kristofer Borglum / USA 2023 / 100 min / Cert 15
Nicholas Cage gives a pitch perfect performance as a timid family man, Paul Matthews, who finds his life turned upside down when he starts to appear as an impassive spectator in other people’s dreams. As in life, his presence in these dreams is banal and non-intrusive. However, his nighttime appearances take on a nightmarish turn when his dream selves start, inexplicably, becoming violent and the real Paul is vilified for the terror being unleashed. The film is both funny and sad with Nicholas Cage showing just the right amount of awkwardness and honesty.
12 Mar The Holdovers
Alexander Payne / USA 2023 / 123 min / Cert 15
Alexander Payne, who won an Oscar for Sideways in 2004, pairs up again with Paul Giamatti, who plays Paul, a history teacher at an expensive boarding school and very much a loner. He reluctantly becomes a ‘holdover’, an adult tasked with overseeing students who have nowhere to go over the Christmas vacation. Angus, a smart yet rebellious teen (newcomer Dominic Sessa) is his only charge. The pair spend the holiday with cafeteria manager Mary, a grieving mother (played magnificently by Da’Vine Joy Randolph). The three are an unlikely fit, but a subtle script avoids the twin pitfalls of lengthy monologues and sentimentality.
26 Mar Scrapper
Charlotte Regan / UK 2023 / 84 min / Cert 12A
Living alone in her flat, 12-year-old Georgie - Epping Forest’s answer to the Artful Dodger, must confront reality when her estranged father, Jason, shows up out of nowhere. Uninterested in a new parental figure, she remains resistant to his efforts. As they both adjust, Georgie and Jason find that they have a lot of growing up to do. The exact opposite of a kitchen-sink drama, this is a bright, colourful, quirky and moving film, with quite a few laughs thrown in for good measure. ‘...one of those sweet, funny films that takes pleasure in the wonder of youth’ (Chicago Reader).
13 Feb Anatomy of a Fall
Justine Triet / France 2023 / 151m / Cert 15 / Subtitles
Sandra Huller stars in this Palme d'Or-winning courtroom thriller directed by Justine Triet. Daniel, a partially sighted 11-year-old, finds his French father dead in the snow outside the family's isolated chalet where they live with Sandra, a successful German writer and his mother. An inquest into the death can't rule out foul play, indicting Sandra with Daniel as a key witness. The prosecution concentrates on Sandra's chosen priorities over her career and the apparent deep-seated unhappiness in their marriage that might make her capable of murder. The film examines the expected role of the wife within marriage and the status of a female migrant in France.
5 Mar Past Lives
Celine Song / USA, S Korea 2023 / 105 min / Cert 12
Writer and director Celine Song’s first feature is a veritable tour de force. It tells the tale of two South Korean childhood sweethearts Nora (Greta Lee) and Hae Sung Teo Yoo) who are painfully separated when Nora’s parents move to Toronto. After years apart their lives intertwine again, but by now Nora is in a relationship with Arthur (John Magaro). Song brings us an achingly beautiful love story, but this thoughtful film offers much more; it is an exploration of how people change over distance and time. Beautiful camerawork and a sublimely understated soundtrack complement the subtle portrayal of emotions by all three principals, resulting in a totally absorbing film.
19 Mar The Beasts
Rodrigo Sorogoyen / Spain, France 2022 / 138 min /15
Antoine and Olga have moved from France to a small village in Galicia, Spain. It’s a peaceful life - until Norwegian developers arrive, offering to pay for a wind farm to be built in the neighbourhood. When they disagree with two local brothers on a final decision, tensions rise to the point of no return. Winner of best film at the Dublin International Film Festival and best foreign-language film at the César Awards, the narrative has a phenomenal quality of acting and generates continuous suspense. ‘A terrific, gripping drama that will cross cultural borders with ease. Every nation has such stories.’ (Irish Times)
9 Apr R.M.N.
Cristain Mungiu / Romania 2023 / 133 min / Cert 15 / Subtitles
R.N.M is directed by Cristian Mungiu, (famed for 4 Months, 3 Weeks & 2 Days which we showed a few years ago to critical acclaim). His latest film explores the live issue of inherent racism between and within many European ethnic communities. Mathias returns to his village in Transylvania from working in Germany where he experienced racism in the workplace. But his very mixed community is not above doling out similar treatment to Sri Lankans brought in to undercut local workers in a local bakery. Simultaneously, his family crises expose the anger within him and his community. As Peter Bradshaw (The Guardian) says the film is ‘is seriously engaged with the dysfunction and unhappiness in Europe that goes unreported and unacknowledged’ .
16 Apr All of us Strangers
Andrew Haigh / UK 2024 / 105 min / Cert 12A
This film won 7 awards at the British Independent Film Awards including best film, director and screenplay. Adam (Andrew Scott) is a screen writer living a lonely life in a London tower block. He starts to develop a hesitant relationship with Harry (Paul Mescal) another resident of the block. Adam becomes increasingly preoccupied with his early memories and is drawn back to his childhood suburban home where his parents (Claire Foy and Jamie Bell) still appear to be living just as they were 30 years before. The four leads provide tremendous performance in this stylish film. One 5 Star review describes it as ‘an enormously satisfying and affecting experience.’(The Guardian)
7 May Monster
Hirokazu Kore-eda / Japan 2023 / 126 min / Cert 12A / Subtitles
Starting with distressed single mother Saori marching into her son’s school, to berate the staff for what she understands to be bullying and physical abuse,
Kore-eda's follow-up to his award-winning films Broker and Shoplifters delicately brings us to view events from three different perspectives: mother’s, teacher’s and child’s – three differing ‘truths’ that are gradually unravelled and reconsidered, all the while reflected in a beautiful accompanying musical score. ‘One of the best movies my eyes have ever seen. Beautiful, engaging, mind-blowing and inspiring. How it’s filmed, the suspense, everything at first doesn’t make sense just to make the perfect sense at the end. I loved it with every fibre of me’ (Yasmine Idali)
23 Apr One Life
James Hawes / UK 2024 / 110 min / Cert 12A
Many will be familiar with the story of Nicholas Winton who rescued 669 children from the Nazis via the ambitious Kindertransport, with the help of his firebrand mother (Helena Bonham-Carter) and a group of dedicated volunteers. The story does not end there. 50 Years later Winton (Antony Hopkins) is still haunted by the fates of those he was not able to save. An unexpected event helps him to approach making peace with the guilt and grief of his past. ‘With an all-star cast One Life is a powerful reminder of the value of individual acts in defence of human rights’ (ICO).
14 May Poor Things
Yorgos Lanthimos / Ireland, UK 2024 / 141 min / Cert 18
Directed by Yorgos Lanthimos and starring Emma Stone, Poor Things tells the story of Bella, a young woman who, after being brought back to life, has to rediscover the world around her and now free of the prejudices of her times revels in a new found social and sexual liberation.
With strong echoes of Shelley’s Frankenstein and based on Alasdair Gray’s novel, Poor Things is a strange and thrilling tale.
“Wildly imaginative and exhilaratingly over the top, Poor Things is a bizarre, brilliant tour de force for director Yorgos Lanthimos” Vox