Welcome to our FILM CLUB!
Keep a look out here & on our social feeds for our latest recommendations.
In The Heat of The Night
After a small town in the south witnesses their worst murder yet . . . the sheriff begins to investigate but is joined by a black policeman from the big city. The two don’t get on for obvious reasons . . . the sheriff is a racist and a bigot. But somehow, they both manage to overcome their differences to find the murderer.
Nightmare Alley
Charismatic wanderer Stanton Carlisle (played by Bradley Cooper) torches his old life and joins a carnival . . . where he learns the secrets of mentalism. Guillermo del Toro has treated us to various horror fables over the years from Pan’s Labyrinth to the fabulous The Shape of Water, but this is slight change of pace . . .
Parallel Mothers
Two single women, two babies, lies, death, art & sex . . . it’s the latest from Pedro Almodóvar. Janis (Penélope Cruz) and teenager Ana (Milena Smit), meet in hospital and become friends. As they leave with their babies, nothing will ever be the same again as their lives become entwined . . .
The Power of the Dog
It’s 1925, and two brothers George (Jesse Plemons) & Phil (Benedict Cumberbatch) have a successful business in Montana. When George marries Rose (played Kirsten Dunst), Phil decides to distance himself from George, Rose and her son Pete (played by Kodi Smit-McPhee).
Licorice Pizza
It’s 1973, it’s California, it’s hot . . . and a teenage actor called Gary Valentine asks 25-year-old Alana Kane out on a date, sparking a difficult friendship, business partnership, and possibly something more . . .
The Electrical Life of Louis Wain
This is a true story of an eccentric British illustrator called Louis Wain (played by Benedict Cumberbatch), who gave the world strange cat paintings and helped us to adopt these felines as pets . . .
The Lost Daughter
Leda Caruso (played by Olivia Colman) is a professor on a solo holiday in Greece. She finds her past life unearthed after the arrival of a difficult family, in particular Nina (played by Dakota Johnson), a very unpredictable young mother . . .
Star Wars
Ok . . . let’s pretend you don’t know the story . . .
Princess Leia (Carrie Fisher) is held hostage by the evil Imperial forces in their effort to take over the galaxy. Luke Skywalker (Mark Hamill) and dashing Captain Han Solo (Harrison Ford) together with Chewbacca and the robotic duo of R2-D2 & C-3PO help to rescue the princess and restore justice in the Empire . . .
Pain & Glory
Ageing Spanish filmmaker Salvador Mallo (played by Antonio Banderas) is invited to an anniversary screening of his 1980s hit film ‘Sabor’. The event brings him into contact with his difficult lead actor – Alberto Crespo (Asier Etxeandia) who fell out with him during the original production. This meeting forces the director to look at his past . . .
The House of Gucci
It’s 1978, and Patrizia Reggiani (played by Lady Gaga) meets Maurizio Gucci (Adam Driver), the heir of the fashion dynasty. Maurizio isn’t interested, but Patrizia has other ideas . . . Based on 2001 book by Sara Gay Forden – The House of Gucci: A Sensational Story of Murder, Madness, Glamour, and Greed, which is exactly what Ridley Scott’s film is . . .
Ghostbusters: Afterlife
When Callie’s (played by Carrie Coon) father dies, he leaves her a run-down house in the middle of nowhere. When her finances run dry, she has no choice but to move in with her children, Trevor (Finn Wolfhard from Stranger Things) and Phoebe (McKenna Grace). Phoebe soon discovers her grandfather was Ghostbuster Egon Spengler and that the ghosts haven’t gone away . . .
Last Night In Soho
Eloise (Thomasin McKenzie) moves from Cornwall to the capital to study at the London School of Fashion. After arriving, she starts to have night-time visions of Sandy (played by Anya Taylor-Joy), a beautiful starlet from the 1960s whose dreams of making it big lead her down a dark path . . .
The French Dispatch
The French Dispatch is a homage to literary magazines, in particular the New Yorker in which the film is dedicated to. A well-constructed movie with detail, comedy, technical invention. Exquisitely controlled filmmaking with a great sense of fun.
Wonder Woman 84
It’s all about the popcorn this week . . . Wonder Woman 84 has been out for a while, but it’s a perfect family film for the half term break.
The French Connection
It’s fifty years since this film first appeared, and it’s still as gritty & tough with a fabulous central performance from Gene Hackman. So much so . . . that he grabbed the best actor Oscar in the 1972 academy awards.
No Time To Die
So here we are (at last I hear you cry) several years after this film was completed, we finally get to see it . . . but was it was worth the wait?