Murnau’s vampire classic remains one of the greatest of all horror movies, genuinely unsettling in its depiction of the wizened, barely human Transylvanian Count Orlok as a threat not only to a ...
When Fink, an idealistic, left-leaning Broadway playwright, turns up in ’40s Hollywood to write a movie screenplay, he finds the sunlit land of promise rather darker, lonelier and more complicated ...
An anime masterpiece that the whole family can enjoy. Ten-year-old Chihiro and her parents unwittingly stumble upon a magical world that is home to a sanctuary for the weary inhabitants of the spirit ...
Parasite’s Song Kang-ho owns the screen as a salaryman turned masked wrestler. After enduring one headlock too many from his boss, a salaryman hits the gym, transforming himself into a ruler of the ...
With Oscar nominations for Best Actress (Judi Dench), Supporting Actress (Cate Blanchett) and Screenplay (Patrick Marber), this commercially successful and critically acclaimed adaptation of Zoë ...
Attraction, insecurity and aggressive power play figure in Roman Polanski’s superb debut feature. Polanski’s feature debut – one of the most impressive in all cinema – is a model of modest but ...
Explore how Bertolt Brecht’s texts influenced Straub-Huillet and British cinema with a panel of academics. Joint ticket offer available with the screening of History Lessons + intro on Sat 16 Mar at ...
The first film Poitier directed but didn’t act in is a buddy comedy that sees Richard Pryor and Gene Wilder’s wrongly convicted best friends hatch an elaborate escape plan involving a prison rodeo.
Four screens open seven days a week for the widest choice of great films. Oscar-winning director Adam Elliot’s tale of separated twins in 1970s Australia is a funny and moving stop-motion triumph.
Andrea Luka Zimmerman’s deeply imaginative, collaborative and collectively-centred films short-circuit so many of the assumptions we make about cinema, including how it is made and what form it might ...