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A Clockwork Orange (18)

A Clockwork Orange

Stanley Kubrick's controversial film triggered copycat violence on its initial release and as a result the director withdrew the film from circulation in Britain, keeping it suppressed right up to his death in 1999. The film follows sadistic punk Alex (Malcolm McDowell) as he takes his gang on a rape and murder spree, showing absolutely no mercy to any of his victims. When he is eventually captured, the authorities subject him to a series of experiments designed to rid him of his violent tendencies.

Book Tickets

Friday 7 Feb 20255:50pm
Monday 17 Feb 20253:00pm

A Real Pain (15)

A Real Pain

A Real Pain follows mismatched cousins David (Jesse Eisenberg) and Benji (Kieran Culkin) as they reunite for a tour through Poland to honour their beloved grandmother. The adventure takes a turn when the odd-couple's old tensions resurface against the backdrop of their family history.

Book Tickets

Friday 24 Jan 20253:35pm8:30pm
Saturday 25 Jan 20254:00pm8:00pm (Closed)
Sunday 26 Jan 20251:40pm5:15pm
Monday 27 Jan 20251:00pm
Tuesday 28 Jan 20253:45pm8:30pm
Wednesday 29 Jan 20253:45pm6:10pm
Thursday 30 Jan 20253:45pm8:20pm

Akenfield (12A)

Akenfield

Our screening on 16 January will be introduced by writer and filmmaker Adam Scovell, and will be followed by a post-film discussion in the cinema bar.


Based on Ronald Blythe’s much-loved oral history book, Akenfield traces three generations of one Suffolk family and their lives in the farming industry, with director Peter Hall – known for his theatre direction - using to great effect a cast non-professional actors drawn from the communities of several Suffolk villages.


With all three generations grandfather, father and son performed by the same actor (local farmer Garrow Shand), the film paints a compelling picture of a traditional way of life facing a period of great change, brought about by the industrialisation of the twentieth century. A profoundly romantic work of sublime poetic realism, Akenfield boasts a sweeping, rhapsodic orchestral score composed by Michael Tippett (Fantasia Concertante on a theme by Corelli) that resonates with the film’s beautiful Impressionistic cinematography, which captures seasonal changes as the film was shot on weekends only across nine months.

Book Tickets

Tuesday 28 Jan 20253:30pm

All Dirt Roads Taste of Salt (18)

All Dirt Roads Taste of Salt

boiled blue, blue fried present the first UK public screening of All Dirt Roads Taste of Salt, directed by raven jackson produced by A24.


Transported to somewhere along the Mississippi, All Dirt Roads Taste of Salt is a gentle bending of time, and a meditation through sound and cinema. The film follows the grief, love, and rituals of Mack. Submerging into water from the first shot, the viewer is left still and enchanted on the other side of this unfolding fictional daydream. This film feels like an ode to those whose lives and stories start at the river.


Bonds we forge through blood and secrets do not have to be linear and over explained, and love rarely needs to be expressed verbally, but rather is evoked by colour and cinematography throughout this debut. An epic doused in realness that allows and projects the vitality of our imaginations and our ability to dream.


In our world where atrocities compound our day to day, we believe that the stories we are told in this film are required and responsibly fabled. We believe this movie embodies the saying that 'those who can't hear, must feel.'


boiled blue, blue fried are two film loving poets, trying something new.


 

Book Tickets

Friday 24 Jan 20258:15pm

Alps (15)

Alps

Synopsis:

The Alps is a secret society including a nurse, a gym coach, a gymnast and a paramedic. They offer a unique service: the recently bereaved can hire them to act as surrogates for the deceased loved ones - wearing their clothes, adopting their mannerisms, etc. - in order to help them adjust to their loss.


'Both a companion piece to and in many ways a reversal of Dogtooth, Alps finds Lanthimos building on that film’s surreally terse style and notions of communication and identity without diluting its singularity or concentration. Working with cinematographer Christos Voudouris, he composes his images (with characters frequently decapitated by off-center framing or liquefied into out-of-focus background forms) to conjure up an atmosphere of dread that hangs over even the most deceptively tranquil scenes. By swathing every relationship in layers of hierarchical pretense and distortion, Lanthimos envisions social order itself as a continuous performance, an existential variation of Shakespeare’s dictum about the human race as players on the world’s stage. For him, the roles people assign each other can weigh as much as the stone masks of ancient Greek theater.' - Fernando F. Croce, Slant

 


Book Tickets

Thursday 20 Feb 20254:00pm

Animal (18)

Animal

The screening on Sunday 13 April will be followed by an in-person or Zoom Q&A with director Sophia Exarhou.


It will be introduced by film critic Savina Petkova.


Synopsis:

Under the hot Greek sun, the animators at an all-inclusive island resort prepare for the busy touristic season. Kalia is the group leader. As summer intensifies and the work pressure builds up, their nights become violent and Kalia's struggle is revealed in the darkness. But when the spotlights turn on again, the show must go on.


Curator's note:

The program concludes with Animal (2023) by Sophia Exarchou, which offers the non-Instagrammable aspect of Greek summer by focusing on the working conditions of entertainment labour in tourist resorts. Filmed with a handheld camera, the viewer can almost smell the cigarettes and alcohol seeping from the screen - an experience in stark contrast to the meticulously composed cinema of Tsangari and Lanthimos.


Savina Petkova is a Bulgarian film critic and programmer based in London, UK with a PhD in Film Studies (King's College London) and a Film Studies Master's Degree (UCL). As a critic and journalist, she has written for Cineuropa, Variety, Sight and Sound, MUBI Notebook, Little White Lies, and many others. Since 2024, she has served as the Programming Panel Lead (features) at the Cambridge Film Festival and as a Features Programmer at the Sofia International Film Festival.  Savina mentors young critics in one of the European Workshops for Film Criticism, being an alumna of Berlinale (2020) and Sarajevo (2020) Talents Press, as well as the Locarno Critics Academy (2023).

Book Tickets

Thursday 27 Mar 20253:30pm
Sunday 13 Apr 20256:30pm

Attenberg (18)

Attenberg

The screening on Sunday 9 March the screening will be introduced by Savina Petkova.


Synopsis:

Marina, an emotionally stunted 23-year-old, lives with her dying architect father in a seaside factory town. Finding humans strange and repellent, she keeps her distance, watching David Attenborough nature documentaries instead. Then a stranger arrives and challenges her to a foosball duel.


Curator's note:

In 2009, as the financial crisis broke and Grexit fears loomed, the Greek film industry was rocked by two cinematic grenades. First came Dogtooth (2009), by Yorgos Lanthimos, followed by Attenberg (2010) from emerging director Athina Rachel Tsangkari. Tsangari and Lanthimos reimagined Greece through an unconventional lens, deploying a cool gaze and a deadpan sense of humor that sharply diverged from traditional depictions of Zorba-esque mediterranean exuberance.


Savina Petkova is a Bulgarian film critic and programmer based in London, UK with a PhD in Film Studies (King's College London) and a Film Studies Master's Degree (UCL). As a critic and journalist, she has written for Cineuropa, Variety, Sight and Sound, MUBI Notebook, Little White Lies, and many others. Since 2024, she has served as the Programming Panel Lead (features) at the Cambridge Film Festival and as a Features Programmer at the Sofia International Film Festival.  Savina mentors young critics in one of the European Workshops for Film Criticism, being an alumna of Berlinale (2020) and Sarajevo (2020) Talents Press, as well as the Locarno Critics Academy (2023).

Book Tickets

Thursday 27 Feb 20253:30pm
Sunday 9 Mar 20256:30pm

Babygirl (18)

Babygirl

A high-powered CEO (Nicole Kidman) puts her career and family on the line when she begins a torrid affair with her much-younger intern (Harris Dickinson).


This film contains flashing images which may affect viewers who are susceptible to photosensitive epilepsy.


The Garden Cinema View:


Babygirl is a radical exploration of a woman’s desire through a distinctly female gaze, highlighting how rare such perspectives remain. Even in the most heated erotic moments, writer/director Halina Reijn's camera focuses on Ronny (Nicole Kidman) rather than her gorgeous young lover (Harris Dickinson), who - despite being a fully-fledged character - serves primarily as a conduit for her complex desires.


The film subverts expectations on multiple fronts. While drawing inspiration from classic sexual psychodramas like 9 1⁄2 WeeksSecretary, and Fatal Attraction, it showcases a fresh take on power dynamics - the young intern dominates while the CEO submits - to create a compelling narrative. It  also avoids tired psychoanalytical tropes by neither over-explaining nor pathologising the couple's intense sexual chemistry, without sacrificing character depth.


Although it's now somewhat clichéd to say that Nicole Kidman delivers a brave, vulnerable performance in Babygirl, it is undeniable. Harris Dickinson stands his ground, giving a truly excellent performance that delicately balances assertiveness, insecurity, humour, and awkwardness.


Book Tickets

Saturday 18 Jan 20252:30pm8:45pm
Sunday 19 Jan 20257:30pm
Monday 20 Jan 20258:35pm
Tuesday 21 Jan 20252:30pm
Wednesday 22 Jan 20258:30pm
Thursday 23 Jan 20253:20pm

Bad Timing (18)

Bad Timing

Our screening on 20 February will be introduced by novelist and publisher Nicholas Royle, and will be followed by a post-film discussion in the cinema bar.


Bad Timing bookended a decade of extraordinary creativity for Nicolas Roeg that includes Performance, Walkabout, Don’t Look Now, and The Man Who Fell to Earth. In these films, Roeg experimented with montage and sound to explore aspects of identity, memory, trauma, sex and time. Bad Timing represents, perhaps, the purest exhibition of Roeg’s unique style, and thematic concerns.


The film is structured around two intercut timelines. The first unfolds in the present, and concerns the suicide attempt of a young women named Milena (Theresa Russell) and the subsequent investigation into her psychology teaching ex-boyfriend Alex (Art Garfunkel) by police Inspector Netusil (Harvey Keitel). The second timeline presents a series of roughly chronological scenes depicting the meeting between Milena and Alex, and the subsequent rise and fall of their relationship.


Decried (accurately) as 'a sick film made by sick people for sick people' by its own distributor, Rank, Bad Timing is an abrasive and pessimistic examination of sexuality; an erotic film that is curiously unsensual - in part due to Garfunkel's anti-charismatic performance. It is also, nonetheless, a stylistic tour de force, full of rich symbolic detail and playful combinations of sound/music and imagery.  



Content warning: contains a scene of graphic rape.

Book Tickets

Thursday 20 Feb 20256:00pm
Wednesday 26 Feb 20253:30pm

Bar Shorts with multi award winning Scottish animators - Will Anderson and Ainslie Henderson (18)

Bar Shorts with multi award winning Scottish animators - Will Anderson and Ainslie Henderson

Bar Shorts presents a programme of films curated by the dynamic duo of Scottish animation - Will Anderson and Ainslie Henderson. Working together since they were students at Edinburgh College of Art in the early 2010s, their films have been described as 'inventive', 'emotional', 'hilarious' and 'fundamentally entertaining'. And they've won a bucket load of awards - BAFTAs, BAAs, MacLaren Awards to name but a few. Whether working together or individually, we think they're two of the most influential people working in UK film and animation today and we're hugely proud to have them at Bar Shorts. And they're dead funny.  


Will and Ainslie will be in conversation with Chris Shepherd after the screening.


The full programme will be confirmed shortly. It will include a selection of Will and Ainslie's award winning films and new work. And films that have influenced them:


Monkey Love Experiments

Shackle

Non-Fungible Therapy

One Little Thing

Skhizein by Jeremy Clapin

End Scene by Steffen Gebjerg

Brother by Adam Elliot

Mound by Alison Shulnik

Nuggets by Andreas Hykade


More to be confirmed soon


Book Tickets

Saturday 15 Feb 20255:10pm

Bergman and the Cinema + Bergman and Faro Island (18)

Bergman and the Cinema + Bergman and Faro Island

The Garden Cinema is partnering with Arena to present a series of documentaries about the world’s greatest artists and musicians, as captured by exceptional film-makers.


On Sunday, 9 February, we will screen two documentaries shown on BBC’s Arena about Ingmar Bergman, directed by Marie Nyreröd, who will be in attendance for a Q&A following the screenings.


Bergman and the Cinema (2007)


Ingmar Bergman, one of the world's most important and influential filmmakers, pays one final visit to Filmstaden, where many of his films were made.


Bergman and Fårö Island (2007)


Bergman discusses his career from his home on the desolate and mysterious Baltic island of Fårö. He talks about the childhood that shaped him, of how the art of film was often a comfort to him, of love and death, and of his worst demons.



Marie Nyreröd has worked at Sveriges Television, SVT, for forty years. She has been active as a reporter, director, editor, and producer. Marie interviewed Ingmar Bergman for the first time in 1983. After many years of conversations, persuasion, and planning, in 2002 she received permission to visit him at his home on Fårö, something no other journalist had been allowed to do. Thirty hours of filmed interviews and conversations were cut together in 2004 into three documentaries: Bergman and the Cinema, Bergman and the Theatre, and Bergman and Fårö Island.


Arena:

Described by Martin Scorsese as 'home to some of the greatest non-fiction film making of the last 40 years', Arena is the world's longest running arts documentary strand. Arena is dedicated to arts and culture high and low, from Visconti to Hip Hop, from Dylan and The Beatles to Nelson Mandela.


In 2000, Arena was given the Special Medallion at the Telluride Film Festival for its contribution to 'cutting edge film making'. It was there that Werner Herzog, a fellow medallion recipient, declared Arena to be 'the oasis in the sea of insanity that is television.' In 2019, Arena was given the Mel Novikoff Award at the San Francisco International Film Festival for its 'contribution to cinema'. Other awards include nine BAFTAS and twenty five nominations, six Royal Television Society awards, Primetime and International Emmys, the Peabody, the Prix Italia, and numerous honours from all over the globe.

 

Book Tickets

Sunday 9 Feb 20256:30pm

Contemporary Greek Cinema launch party + Alps (18)

Contemporary Greek Cinema launch party + Alps

To launch our Greek Contemporary Cinema season in style, we're thrilled to be partnering up with our friends & neighbours at The Life Goddess, just a short walk away on Store Street. For the occasion, they will be providing a sampler platter of their most delicious & authentic Greek treats, as well as a fantastic glass of wine - all included in your ticket. You'll have the chance to mingle with fellow members over these nibbles, and to purchase some of their excellent deli products in the pop-up shop in our bar area.


After this, we'll head into the screen for Alps, Yorgos Lanthimos' second and last Greek-language feature, that solidified his reputation as an auteur with a unique, absurdist vision, for which he is now globally known. The film will be followed by a panel discussion, with Dr Tonia Kazakopoulou, Dr Eddie Falvey, and season curator Erifili Missiou. They will dive into Lanthimos' work and the development of Greek cinema since the turn of the century.


Event timings:

15:00 - 16:30  Greek wine, nibbles & pop-up shopping

16:30 - 16:40  Introduction by season programmer Erifili Missiou

16:40 - 18:15  Screening of Alps

18:15 - 19:00  Panel discussion


Tickets are available for £18.50, which includes a glass of Greek wine, a sampler plate, and an unallocated seat for the screening and panel discussion. They are restricted to 2 per member, meaning you can bring a friend along and introduce them to the cinema.


Important info:

The team behind The Life Goddess will provide a variety of tasty nibbles, all of which are suitable for vegetarians. If you have any dietary restrictions or allergies, please notify us by emailing membership@thegardencinema.co.uk at least 72 hours in advance, so we can try to cater for them. Although we will do our best, we may not be able to provide substitutes for certain dishes.


About the film:

The Alps is a secret society including a nurse, a gym coach, a gymnast and a paramedic. They offer a unique service: the recently bereaved can hire them to act as surrogates for the deceased loved ones - wearing their clothes, adopting their mannerisms, etc. - in order to help them adjust to their loss.


About the panellists:

Dr Tonia Kazakopoulou is a Lecturer in Film & Television at the University of Reading. Her research interests include women's cinema of small nations, and particularly of Greece; contemporary European and world cinemas; the politics of representation in film and television. She has been the curator of the international standing conference Contemporary Greek Film Cultures, and she has also published on women's cinema, on Greek women screenwriters, on contemporary Greek cinema and motherhood, as well as on the female characters in Yorgos Lanthimos' films.

 

Dr Eddie Falvey is an independent film scholar. He completed his AHRC-funded PhD in Film Studies at University of Exeter in 2018 and his work mostly focuses on industrial film histories and the diversities of cult cinema. He is author of Re-Animator (2021) and New York on Early Films: The Archive and the City (forthcoming), as well as editor of ReFocus: The Films of Nicolas Winding Refn (with Kate Moffat and Thomas Joseph Watson, forthcoming), The Cinema of Yorgos Lanthimos: Films, Form, Philosophy (2022), and New Blood: Critical Approaches to Contemporary Horror (with Joe Hickinbottom and Jonathan Wroot, 2020).


Erifili Missiou is a writer/ director from Greece, with extensive professional experience in Film and Fine Arts. She currently serves as Head Programmer at The Garden Cinema and Artistic Director of EFN Short Film Festival. She is the curator of Women Aren't Funny, Who is Luis Buñuel, Ealing Comedies, Contemporary Greek Cinema and Queer Cinema at The Garden Cinema. She has a track record of curating disability-focused film programs that promote inclusivity and accessibility and facilitating events tailored to the needs of neurodivergent, Deaf, and hard-of-hearing communities.


About The Life Goddess:

The Life Goddess, greek deli divine, is a genuine cuisine project aiming to become a reference of new hellenic kitchen to the world. The cooking philosophy is based on a rustic tradition, so unrefined and simple that is deeply friendly and relaxing. The journey of the senses starts from mother-earth and finishes at a feast on a table where all the family, friends and companions share the same nourishment and enjoy the sublime result of their efforts. For Greeks preparing a meal for someone is the ultimate token of respect, gratitude, friendship and love. Our philosophy is that good quality sustenance is the epitome of a healthy and happy life!

Book Tickets

Sunday 16 Feb 20253:00pm (Sold Out)

Digger (18)

Digger

Synopsis:

A father and a son long lost. Love and hate. Digging deep into mud to find their roots. Revenge and Redemption. A Western, revisited.


Curator's note:

Digger (2020), produced by Rachel Athina Tsangari, is another brilliant tragicomedy, set in the stunningly pictured damp woodlands of Northern Greece. Reminiscent of Rodrigo Sorogoyen's The Beasts, though distinctly its own film, conflict is at its core: between nature and machine, local community and so-called progress, and a father and his long-estranged son.



Book Tickets

Thursday 13 Mar 20253:30pm
Sunday 6 Apr 20257:00pm

Doc'n Roll Presents- Chris Gollon: Life in Paint + Director Q&A (18)

Doc'n Roll Presents- Chris Gollon: Life in Paint + Director Q&A

The first-ever feature documentary on acclaimed London-born artist Chris Gollon (1953 - 2017), Life in Paint explores his pioneering use of music to create new imagery; from lyrics by Bob Dylan, Neil Young or Talk Talk, to direct collaborations with musicians such as Yi Yao, Eleanor McEvoy and Thurston Moore, who has hailed Gollon’s “creative and modest genius”.


A sensitive and innovative painter of women, Gollon also expressed a powerful common humanity via his androgynous figures, and there has been a surge of interest in his work since his untimely death just seven years ago. Via found footage and BBC clips, the film shows Gollon disarmingly revealing his creative process and innovative techniques. Moving montages of Gollon’s images, combined with music by artists including The Skids, Gavin Bryars, Sleaford Mods, Yi Yao and Eleanor McEvoy, provide insights into how Gollon fused the two art forms, and how each energised and changed the other.


The film will be followed by a Q&A with the film's director Mark Calderbank.


Book Tickets

Tuesday 4 Mar 20258:00pm

Don't Look Now (15)

Don't Look Now

Don't Look Now screens in our British Cinema, 1970-1980 season as it was originally exhibited in 1973, as part of a double bill with The Wicker Man. With an introduction from Iain Smith (KCL). 


Donald Sutherland and Julie Christie mesmerise as a British married couple on an extended trip to Venice following a family tragedy. While in that elegantly decaying city, they have a series of inexplicable, terrifying, and increasingly dangerous experiences. A masterpiece from Nicolas Roeg, Don’t Look Now, adapted from a story by Daphne du Maurier, is a brilliantly disturbing tale of the supernatural, as renowned for its innovative editing and haunting cinematography as for its naturalistic eroticism and its unforgettable climax and denouement.


Tickets for Don't Look Now and The Wicker Man may be purchased separately. Alternatively, a £5 discount applies for those wishing to get the full 1970s double-programme experience. Add tickets for both screenings and proceed to checkout where the discount will be automatically applied.  



Book Tickets

Sunday 19 Jan 20253:45pm (Sold Out)

Echoes and Horizons: Bomba Animated Shorts (Rating TBC)

Echoes and Horizons: Bomba Animated Shorts

Cinema Mentiré present a selection of shorts from the BOMBA  Animada Collective in Bolivia. The shorts are in Spanish with English subtitles.


A collection of shorts by BOMBA Animada, a Bolivian animation studio showcasing female animators’ work. Created in 2023 to make their work visible, BOMBA seeks to develop alliances inside and outside Bolivia to strengthen the voices of both individuals and as part of a united group. Their diverse techniques range from stop motion and drawing to pixelling and digital animation. Their films often reflect their cultural identity, folk stories, and imaginative storytelling. Their members organise workshops, talks, and screenings, also offering fundraising guidance and financial support. They share their experience to inspire and demonstrate to Bolivian women that making a career in animation in the country is possible.


This screening is part of Cinema Mentiré's season of recent Bolivian films in partnership with The Garden Cinema - Echoes and Horizons: Contemporary Bolivian Cinema.


On Sunday mornings our Family Screenings are followed by a free activity for Children.


The screening is Pay What You Can, which means you’re free to pay as much or as little as you can afford. By paying for a ticket, you will enable us to keep offering Pay What You Can screenings to families struggling with the cost of living. Thank you


Films:

AJLLA UMILLA, dir. Alexandra Ramirez, 2min.

DUBICEL, dir. Yashira Jordán, 12min.

THE JIPIJAPA WEAVERS | LAS TEJEDORAS DE JIPIJAPA, dir. Clara Chacón, 4min.

GRAVITY | GRAVEDAD, dir. Matisse Gonzalez, 10min.

CHILLINA, dir. Andy Garnica, 2min.

PASKAY, dir. Andrea Estéfany Caballero, 14min.

THE TUNNEL AND THE COB | EL TÚNEL Y LA MAZORCA, dir. Alexandra Ramirez, 2min.

WATERSHED TALES | CUENTOS DE LA CUENCA, dir. Andy Garnica, 7min.


Book Tickets

Saturday 8 Feb 202511:00am
Sunday 9 Feb 202511:00am

Echoes and Horizons: Chaco (18)

Echoes and Horizons: Chaco

Cinema Mentiré presents the UK premiere of Chaco.


Set in 1934, during the Chaco War fought between Bolivia and Paraguay, this spare historical drama follows a small regiment made up of Aymara and Quechua Indigenous soldiers commanded by a retired, gruff German officer fighting for the Bolivian Army. The troop is in a limbo, looking fruitlessly for the enemy, and wandering through the hostile, semi-arid lowlands in extreme weather. Isolation, despair and hunger grow with every day, every hellish march and hastily erected camp. Pitched somewhere between the bone-dry absurdism of Lucrecia Martel’s Zama and the minimalist drone of Lisandro Alonso’s Los muertos, and inspired by the experiences of his grandfather, director Diego Mondaca’s debut feature is a powerful meditation on the futility and absurdity of war.


The screening will be introduced by the Cinema Mentiré team.


This film is part of Cinema Mentiré's season of recent Bolivian films in partnership with The Garden Cinema - Echoes and Horizons: Contemporary Bolivian Cinema.

Book Tickets

Friday 21 Feb 20258:00pm

Echoes and Horizons: Puerto Escondido (18)

Echoes and Horizons: Puerto Escondido

Cinema Mentiré presents the UK premiere of Puerto Escondido.


In 1879, Bolivia lost its access to the sea in a war. When the director Gabriela Paz was a child, she did not understand how Bolivia had lost the sea – she thought the Chileans had taken it in buckets, but at the end of the day, they felt lazy and left a piece, which is nowadays Lake Titicaca. Puerto Escondido is a travel itinerary towards interior landscapes, myths, characters and contradictions in a country that every day remembers this loss. It is also a kind of letter to a sibling country, offering a current perspective on the aftermath of the Pacific War and how it was experienced in private and public spaces, mixing family archives and official sources. In this film, many extraordinary, peculiar stories will not go unnoticed and reflect Bolivia’s insatiable thirst for the sea.


The screening will be introduced by film researcher Laís Lorenço (University of Campinas - UNICAMP, Brazil & University College London - UCL, UK).


This film is part of Cinema Mentiré's season of recent Bolivian films in partnership with The Garden Cinema - Echoes and Horizons: Contemporary Bolivian Cinema.

Book Tickets

Saturday 25 Jan 20256:00pm

Fashion Film Club X Doc'n Roll present: A 2 Tone Story + Q&A (18)

Fashion Film Club X Doc'n Roll present: A 2 Tone Story + Q&A

The Fashion Film Club in collaboration with Doc'n Roll Film Festival are delighted to present a screening of Pauline Black: A 2 Tone Story, followed by a Q&A with Pauline and director Jane Mingay.


Pauline Black, lead singer of 2-Tone hit band The Selecter, tells her extraordinary life story in the same frank manner that helped shape her as an iconic, era-defining female musician. Pauline had a difficult upbringing and joining the 2-Tone music movement in 1979 was the perfect catalyst; enabling her to explore and express all sides of herself.


Looking back at her own ground-breaking experience in this feature documentary, Pauline traces how her legacy came about and how it is relevant to the world today, especially where society pushes the boundaries of gender, politics, race and identity.


Pauline, of mixed Nigerian and Jewish heritage, was adopted into a white family in Essex in the 50’s. Her upbringing was defined by casual racism from within her own family. Pauline went on to find her own identity in the Coventry 2-Tone music scene and The Selecter was a reflection of working-class life in Thatcher's Britain, their music as social reportage and with an ethos of anti-racism and anti-sexism.


This is a cinematic and visceral documentary mixing intimate actuality, archive and interviews and a storming soundtrack. Contributors include Arthur ‘Gaps’ Hendrickson, Don Letts, Skin, Damon Albarn, Rhoda Dakar, Lynval Golding, Mykaell Riley, Sonia Boyce and Jools Holland.

Book Tickets

Monday 10 Feb 20256:15pm (Sold Out)

Get Your Adventure Shorts On! (18)

Get Your Adventure Shorts On!

The annual London Mountain Film Festival collection of shorter films to amaze, enlighten, surprise and inspire you! There really is something for everyone in this collection, so if your interest in adventure reaches far and wide then this is for you. Buckle up!


Many Small Steps 3’ (Rob Waugh) A young boy's passion for nature leads him to conquer his first Munro, offering a heartwarming metaphor for life's challenges and triumphs.


Eliot Jackson - Drop The Mic 2’ (Scott Secco) A thrilling ride with Eliot Jackson, a mountain biking legend with hidden superpowers.


Concrete Summer 14’ (Jacob Watson) We follow Robbo as he tries to reignite the fixed-gear scene in Liverpool, showing the sweeter side of the illegal sport of alleycat racing.


Wild Aerial 16’ (Trixie Pacis) Blending techniques from the disparate worlds of mountaineering and acrobatics, adventure aerialist Sasha Galitzki performs gravity-defying routines in subzero temperatures.


The Smoke That Thunders 4’ (Caleb Roberts) Brave the untamed Zambezi with Ben Marr as he battles upstream to conquer the legendary Minus rapids.


Tether 12’ (Laura Basil Duncan) From skateparks to sheep pastures, UK skateboarder Lois Pendlebury navigates an unplanned transition to shepherding.


Unplugged 4’ (Samuel McMahon) Liam Rivera carves through untouched snow in a breathtaking black-and-white free-ride film with only the mountains' ambient sounds.


The Road to No Man’s Land 7’ (Solomon Olsen) Will's quest for freedom leads him into the Sahara's heart, where a deteriorating motorbike tests his limits.


Defensoras 4’ (Eilidh Munro, Bethan John) A defiant and resilient collective of Bolivian indigenous female defenders risk their lives standing up to power.


My Wilderness 4’ (Rupert Shanks, Ana Norrie-Toch) Ana's passion for Scotland's wild terrains shapes her art, blending bikepacking and choreography.


Salt 12’ (Alice Ward) Unusually salty at birth, Alice is diagnosed for Cystic Fibrosis before becoming the first woman in Ireland to shoot surf films in water from a female perspective.


Travelling Home 5’ (Juliet Klottrup) A retired farrier’s heartfelt annual pilgrimage to the Appleby Horse Fair, capturing the essence of tradition and community in Cumbria.


Wolf of Wingsuit 4’ (Aaron Garcia) The beautiful and towering mountains of Lauterbrunnen, Switzerland - an off-season paradise for Wingsuit professionals.


(This programme may change)


Book Tickets

Saturday 8 Mar 20256:00pm

Goodbye Julia: Sudan Fundraiser (18)

Goodbye Julia: Sudan Fundraiser

Goodbye Julia was the first Sudanese film ever to screen in Cannes official selection. It went on to win the festival’s Freedom Prize and was later Sudan’s official submission to the Academy Awards for Best International Feature Film.


From executive producer Lupita Nyong’o, Goodbye Julia tells the story of Mona (Eiman Yousif) and her maid Julia (Siran Rick). As political tensions mount in Khartoum, Julia finds herself torn between the truth of what happened to her missing husband, the possibility of new love with activist Majier and how she can care for her son.  


Set around South Sudan’s succession from Sudan in 2011, Goodbye Julia tells a neglected but crucial historical story in exceptionally personal terms. Poignant, tender and beautifully shot, it is part of a wave of excellent films from Sudan including Talking About Trees and You Will Die at Twenty.


Proceeds from this screening will be shared with Hadhreen, a grassroots charity in Sudan offering community kitchens to Sudan's displaced people, facing humanitarian crisis.


The screening will be introduced by Dena Latif – a human rights lawyer who fled Sudan at the outbreak of war.

Book Tickets

Saturday 18 Jan 20253:30pm (Sold Out)

Hard Truths (12A)

Hard Truths

Housewife Pansy (Marianne Jean-Baptiste) is not happy. She is agoraphobic, a hypochondriac, and paranoid about animals, birds, insects, plants, and flowers. She is confrontational with everyone, especially her plumber husband Curtley and her unemployed son Moses, whom she thinks is wasting his life. Her sister Chantelle (Michele Austin) runs a thriving hair salon. A single mum, she enjoys life, and lives harmoniously with her daughters Kayla, who works in cosmetics, and Aleisha, a trainee lawyer.


Leigh’s new film explores family relationships in the post-pandemic world. After over a decade spent making his two epic period films Mr. Turner and Peterloo, Mike Leigh returns to his ongoing exploration of the contemporary world with this tragi-comic study of human strengths and weaknesses.


The Garden Cinema View:


Mike Leigh’s return to contemporary social drama is a late career triumph, and one of the best British films of recent years. The cast, led by an astonishing performance from Marianne Jean-Baptiste, have emerged from Leigh’s improvisational workshop process with deeply authentic characters. This tactile sense of realism opens up the film into extremely funny, and also difficult and emotional spheres. Cinematography from the late, great, Dick Pope presents a flat and sterile North London. Such high-key lighting also serves to bring out the skin tone contrasts in the predominantly British-Caribbean cast.


There is a tender approach to even the most difficult of characters that feels particular to Leigh, and Hard Truths reminds us of his unique talents in chronicling British lives.  


Book Tickets

Friday 7 Feb 20258:40pm
Sunday 9 Feb 20254:50pm
Monday 10 Feb 20258:40pm

High Altitude Double Bill: Dream Again and Everest Revisited (18)

High Altitude Double Bill: Dream Again and Everest Revisited

The screening will be followed by a Q&A with Adriana Brownlee


DREAM AGAIN with Adriana Brownlee

Directed by Mathis Decroux


Adriana Brownlee is the youngest woman to climb all 14 of the world's tallest mountains that are over 8,000m high. The 23-year-old British mountaineer made history with her achievement. In this film she faces the formidable challenges of Gasherbrum I and Gasherbrum II. These two peaks, her 10th and 11th summits, mark her final climbs in Pakistan on this extraordinary journey.


In this phase, Adriana evolves her climbing style by striving for minimal assistance and forgoing supplemental oxygen, climbing alongside her trusted partner, Geljen Sherpa. This not only brings her incredible encounters, powerful emotions and painful moments, but it also opens her eyes on the 8000 industry.


This story is about more than reaching summits. It’s about a young woman chasing her dreams, rediscovering the joy and wonder of her childhood passion, and inspiring others to pursue their own aspirations. Adriana’s journey captures the essence of resilience, the power of dreaming big, and the drive to push beyond limits in pursuit of something extraordinary.



EVEREST REVISITED 1924-2024

Directed by John Porter and Dom Bush


Everest Revisited 1924-2024 explores the characters on the 1924 expeditions, both the British and those they hired to support the expedition - Sherpa, Bhotia and Tibetans. It uses extensive historical film and photographic material as well as interviews with Everest scholars and mountaineers. Moving from the past to the present, the film asks: What the mountain means to climbers and Nepalis 100 years on from this famous expedition that lost a Bhotia, a Ghurkha and of course Mallory and Irvine on the mountain.


Julie Summers, the great niece of Sandy Irvine and mountaineer Matt Sharman seek insights from many well-known climbers including Sir Chris Bonington, Rebecca Stephens, Krish Thapa, Stephen Venables, Dawson Stelfox and Leo Houlding. Observations on historical and social impacts are provided by Dr. Jonathan Westway and Ed Douglas, while Dr. Melanie Windridge talks about the beginnings of the science of Everest.

Book Tickets

Saturday 8 Mar 20258:15pm

Hundreds of Beavers UK Tour + Q&A (12A)

Hundreds of Beavers UK Tour + Q&A
Join star Ryland Brickson Cole Tews and the beavers for Hundreds of Beavers... Live!

In this 19th century, supernatural winter epic, a drunken applejack salesman must go from zero to hero and become North America's greatest fur trapper by defeating hundreds of beavers.

Book Tickets

Friday 18 Apr 20257:45pm

Jubilee (15)

Jubilee

Our screening on 13 February is introduced by BFI artist's moving image Curator William Fowler, and will be followed by a post-film discussion group in the cinema bar.


When Queen Elizabeth I asks her court alchemist to show her England in the future, she’s transported 400 years to a post-apocalyptic wasteland of roving girl gangs, an all-powerful media mogul, fascistic police, scattered filth, and twisted sex. With Jubilee, legendary British filmmaker Derek Jarman channeled political dissent and artistic daring into a revolutionary blend of history and fantasy, musical and cinematic experimentation, satire and anger, fashion and philosophy. With its uninhibited punk petulance and sloganeering, Jubilee brings together many cultural and musical icons of the time, including Jordan, Toyah Willcox, Little Nell, Wayne County, Adam Ant, and Brian Eno (with his first original film score), to create a genuinely unique, unforgettable vision. Ahead of its time and often frighteningly accurate in its predictions, it is a fascinating historical document and a gorgeous work of film art.

Book Tickets

Thursday 13 Feb 20256:00pm
Friday 21 Feb 20253:15pm

July Rhapsody (15)

July Rhapsody

A new digital restoration, presented by Cheng Cheng Films and Focus Hong Kong.


Widely regarded as one of the best works of modern Hong Kong cinema, the multiple award-winning July Rhapsody stars Anita Mui in her final role before her tragic death in 2003. Directed by Ann Hui, the film is a deeply affecting character-driven exploration of broken relationships, destructive yearning and lost dreams, drawing on Chinese poetry and with an impressive ensemble cast that also includes Jackie Cheung and Karena Lam.


The story revolves around high school teacher Lam Yiu-kwok (Cheung) and his wife Chan Man-ching ( Mui), who initially seem to be living the perfect family life. However, tensions lurk in the shadows, and when a student (Karena Lam) falls in love with Yiu-kwok and a figure from Man-ching’s past reappears, the cracks in their relationship start to show, throwing them into emotional turmoil.



Book Tickets

Saturday 25 Jan 20258:30pm
Thursday 30 Jan 20258:00pm
Saturday 8 Feb 20251:00pm
Monday 10 Feb 20258:00pm

Kaili Blues (15)

Kaili Blues

In anticipation of Bi Gan’s third feature Resurrection (following his Long Day's Journey Into Night), the Chinese Cinema Project revisits his aesthetically remarkable and poetry-filled debut Kaili Blues. The film follows a small-town doctor who finds himself interacting with people from his past and future, whilst travelling the countryside to locate his nephew. Shot primarily in Kaili, Guizhou Province, Bi Gan’s hometown, using local dialect, the screening will have both Chinese and English subtitles.


This special screening also celebrates Chinese New Year 2025, and which is the third successive Garden Cinema CNY special event, following the UK Premiere of Kong Dashan’s Journey to the West in 2023, and an immersive screening of Wong Kar Wai’s In the Mood for Love in 2024.


'The intense blues and greens, the saturated, tangibly thick light and shade of the settings, the impossible visions of twirling, ever-present disco mirror balls, defying space, are conjured into light and sound, and, via poetry, into cinema.' -  Cinema Scope

Book Tickets

Wednesday 29 Jan 20258:10pm (Members' presale from 6pm, 14/1) (Sold Out)

LSFF: How To Make a Friend (PG)

LSFF: How To Make a Friend

You have been my friend. That in itself is a tremendous thing.” – E.B White, Charlotte’s Web


Friends can come in many forms; both real and imaginary. Some are there to help us in a moment of need, some live alongside us, some are very small, and some are there to simply bring us a can of soda.


Whimsical hand-drawn animation, stop-motion, live-action and magical adventures await in our now-annual selection of short films for younger film fans. A loyal pet, an inquisitive creature in the forest, and a very large frog are all here to make your acquaintance in a programme that explores the different ways that we find and make friends; in the park, sharing a packed lunch, or as part of an experimental study into new and inventive ways to communicate with one another.


Suitable for children aged 7+ and their parents/guardians.


Films


Rice Ball, dir. Kristina Pringle, UK 2023, 1min

Wider Than The Sky, dir. Philip Taylor, UK 2023, 11min

Lose voice toolkit, dir. Adele Dipasquale, Netherlands 2024, 19min

Finding Play, dir. Dan Castro, UK 2024, 3min

Amy and Frog, dir. Paul Williams, China 2023, 11min

The Night Boots, dir. Pierre-Luc Granjon, France 2024, 12min

Cold Soda, dir. Huayi Yu, USA 2024, 3min

tenderfold, dir. Jun Chen, UK 2023, 3min

Mû, dir. Malin Neumann, Germany 2023, 6min


Image credit: Lose voice toolkit, dir. Adele Dipasquale

Book Tickets

Sunday 26 Jan 20251:20pm

LSFF: London Lives (18)

LSFF: London Lives

London pulses with stories of connection found in unexpected places. A programme exploring the lives of those who brush past each other daily: two neighbours, close yet unaware of each other's private struggles; a man recalling his last night with a friend lost to hardship; a young boy weaving through the city’s high-energy streets with a backpack of cash; a British-Filipino discovering the cultural depth of Ube.


From Albanian workers finding camaraderie by a London canal to a girl connecting to her Yoruba roots through music, these films reveal the human resilience and hidden bonds within London’s mosaic.


This event has descriptive subtitles and BSL interpretation.

Book Tickets

Sunday 26 Jan 20253:10pm

Matchbox (18)

Matchbox

The screening on Sunday 23 February will be followed by a Zoom Q&A with director Yannis Economides and will be introduced by season curator and Garden Cinema head programmer, Erifili Missiou.


Synopsis:

Dimitris, a grumpy middle-aged man, is having a hard time with his business partner on a particular decision as to opening a new business; and he’s also having a hell of a time with his family members. He has a really short temper, and the unpleasant behaviour of his nasty wife and his disrespectful children don’t contribute much to his health.


Curator's note:

Matchbox viscerally portrays the dark side of the Greek family. Taking the Greek audience by surprise, and now a cult classic, it was an outright slap in the face in 2002, and its heightened realism continues to shock audiences to this day.



Book Tickets

Sunday 23 Feb 20257:00pm
Thursday 10 Apr 20254:00pm

Moana 2 (PG)

Moana 2

Moana 2 is the thrilling sequel to Disney's beloved 2016 animated musical. This time, Moana, now a seasoned wayfinder, receives an unexpected call from her ancestors that leads her on a daring new adventure beyond the familiar shores of Motunui.


Accompanied by the ever-powerful demigod Maui and a fresh crew of unlikely seafarers, Moana embarks on a journey deep into the far seas of Oceania. Their mission: to break an ancient curse that threatens a long-lost island once vital to her ancestors. Along the way, Moana and her companions must face dangerous waters, hidden islands, and mysterious foes—including a formidable sea monster.


Featuring returning stars Auli’i Cravalho as Moana and Dwayne Johnson as Maui, Moana 2 promises a heart-pounding voyage filled with new songs, vibrant animation, and the signature Disney magic.


Moana 2 contains several sequences with flashing lights that may affect those who are susceptible to photosensitive epilepsy or have other photosensitivities.


On Sunday mornings our Family Screenings are followed by a free activity for Children.


The screening is Pay What You Can, which means you’re free to pay as much or as little as you can afford. By paying for a ticket, you will enable us to keep offering Pay What You Can screenings to families struggling with the cost of living. Thank you

Book Tickets

Saturday 15 Mar 202511:00am
Sunday 16 Mar 202511:00am

Mother, Country + Q&A (15)

Mother, Country + Q&A

Pablo Navarrete's parents were forced to leave Chile after a military coup on 11 September 1973. They arrived in the UK as political refugees after spending time in the Pinochet dictatorship’s torture centres. They didn’t know it then, but Britain would be where they would settle, have a family, and still live, nearly 50 years later.


Filmed over more than three years, Mother, Country is a deeply personal film that follows the director as he travels to Chile with his parents in 2020 to witness a people’s uprising and finally confront their past.


The screening will be followed by a live Q&A with director Pablo Navarrete, his mother, Cristina Godoy-Navarrete, and father, Roberto Navarrete, hosted by Mariela Kohon, Senior International Officer at the Trade Union Congress (TUC).


Click here to listen to a Q&A with them chaired by journalist Matt Kennard, after a sold-out September 2024 screening of the film at the Garden Cinema.


Matt's new book The Racket will be available to buy at the cinema.


'Pablo Navarrete focuses on his family in a simple yet poignant story about Chile’s traumatic past' Dmovies.org


Book Tickets

Thursday 13 Mar 20256:00pm

My Name is Eftihia (18)

My Name is Eftihia

The screening on Sunday 30 March will be introduced by ethnomusicologist Ed Emery.


Synopsis:

The story of songwriter Eftyhia Papagiannopoulou (1893-1972), who escaped the burning of Smyrna and journeyed to Athens, Greece, where she became a major figure in Greek popular music and the beloved lyricist of the country.


Curator's note:

My Name is Eftuxia (2019) is the most "sane" film in this program. An engrossing biopic of Rebetiko genre songwriter Eftihia Papagianopoulou, it traces the life of this feisty woman whose life challenged societal norms, against the backdrop of tumultuous challenges - both the country’s and her own.


Ed Emery is an ethnomusicologist and Research Associate in the Centre for Migration and Diaspora Studies at the School of Oriental and African Studies [SOAS, London]. For 25 years he has been engaged with Rebetiko Studies both in London and in Greece (the annual Hydra Rebetiko Gathering). He is the organiser of the famous SOAS Rebetiko Band, where his chosen instruments are tzoura and baglama. In January 2025 he completed the editing of the SOAS Rebetiko Reader. Copies will be on display at the film showing. The book is freely downloadable from www.geocities.ws/soasrebetikoreader.

Book Tickets

Sunday 30 Mar 20256:30pm
Thursday 3 Apr 20253:30pm

Nickel Boys (12A)

Nickel Boys

Nickel Boys is based on the historic reform school in 1960s Florida called the Dozier School for Boys, which was notorious for abusive treatment of students. It explores the story of Elwood Curtis, a young African-American boy who is sent to the Nickel Academy, a fictional version of the Dozier School, after he is falsely accused of a crime. While there, he meets a boy named Turner, and the two form a close friendship as they try to survive the horrors of the school and its corrupt administrators.


The Garden Cinema View:


Colson Whitehead’s source novel The Nickel Boys is arguably his most orthodox narrative and, given the sobering material, we might expect a faithfully sombre adaptation. It’s to director RaMell Ross’ credit that the resulting film is one of the more formally interesting works to emerge from a major studio in recent years. Ross adheres to the impressionistic style that worked so effectively in his dazzling slice-of-life documentary, Hale County This Morning, This Evening (2018), deploying POV camera work, document and archival inserts, and changing film formats to create a striking mosaic. It's an undeniably immersive style (this is a period piece that doesn’t feel distanced by art direction), and a creative decision that shields us from the explicit horrors visited upon the bodies of the young black men by the abusive staff of the Nickel Academy reform school. As in the novel, the story is innately powerful, but Ross achieves what the best adaptations should do, and elevates it into a distinctly cinematic achievement.    

Book Tickets

Saturday 18 Jan 202511:30am
Monday 20 Jan 20255:30pm
Tuesday 21 Jan 20253:00pm8:00pm
Wednesday 22 Jan 20253:00pm
Thursday 23 Jan 202512:30pm

Nosferatu (15)

Nosferatu

Robert Eggers’ Nosferatu is a gothic tale of obsession between a haunted young woman and the terrifying vampire infatuated with her, causing untold horror in its wake.


The Garden Cinema View:


The steady production of film and TV adaptations of Dracula have turned Bram Stoker’s novel into something of a gothic urtext. For this passion project, Robert Eggers credits the book along with Henrik Galeen’s screenplay for the 1922 version as sources, and visually references the Murnau and Herzog Nosferatus, along with Francis Ford Coppola’s Dracula. This is an immense piece of cinematic world-building of its own however, with all aspects of production and art design, as well as the cinematography, contributing to an immersive and gripping viewing experience.


As with his previous films, Eggers draws upon a range of literary research to construct a juicy, strange, and very funny lexicon, spoken by relish by his actors. Amongst a cast including several of Eggers’ regular players, the standouts are two very physical performances. Bill Skarsgård plays Count Orlok like a black hole, sucking all light and even his own body within himself. Lily-Rose Depp conjures a furrowed brow (much like Winona Ryder’s take on Mina Harker), before throwing herself into an extraordinary sequence of fits and contortions supposedly inspired by the Japanese avant-garde ‘dance of utter darkness’, Butoh.  


Eggers’ über-Freudian displays of lust-in-abjection might feel a little old-fashioned, but also make for a refreshing turn away from the romantic vampires of the past 30 years, and perhaps call back to his previous take-down of puritan attitudes to female sexuality in The VVitch. A film that lingers in the imagination, in the long nights that follow the trip to the cinema.      


Book Tickets

Saturday 18 Jan 20258:30pm
Sunday 19 Jan 20252:15pm
Monday 20 Jan 202512:15pm
Tuesday 21 Jan 20255:15pm
Thursday 23 Jan 20258:30pm

O Lucky Man! (15)

O Lucky Man!

This screening will be introduced by John Wischmeyer (City Lit).


Nothing and nobody is spared from Lindsay Anderson and writer David Sherwin’s caustic gaze in their inexhaustibly inventive and sometimes horrifying satire, the second in their ‘state of the nation’ trilogy. Sparked by an idea proposed by star Malcolm McDowell, it follows the continuing adventures of the Mick Travis character, now an ambitious coffee salesman, as he travels around a Britain of Kafka-esque bureaucracy and absurdity, his exploits commented on throughout by Alan Price’s musical interludes.


Content warning: Contains scenes of blackface and racist stereotyping.

Book Tickets

Saturday 15 Feb 20251:30pm

Penda's Fen (12A)

Penda's Fen

This screening will be introduced by interdisciplinary artist, writer, and academic Evie Salmon, and is followed by a post-film discussion group in the cinema bar.


Screening 50 years after its pioneering first broadcast as part of BBC TV's hugely influential stand-alone drama series 'Play for Today', and directed by the fiercely committed film-maker Alan Clarke, Penda's Fen fuses a multi-layered interrogation of social, political, familial and religious forces with a queer, pagan and radically subversive understanding of place, culture and history, to chart a singular rite of passage into adulthood for its protagonist Stephen. Recognised at once for its visionary imagination, and an enduring influence on generations of writers and artists who witnessed that original transmission, dramatist David Rudkin's remarkable work has become one of the most enduring and rewarding touchstones of post-war British culture.

Book Tickets

Thursday 23 Jan 20256:00pm (Sold Out)

Plato's Academy (18)

Plato's Academy

The screening on Sunday 16 March will be followed by an in-person or Zoom Q&A with director Filipos Tsitos.


It will be introduced by Dr. Tonia Kazakopoulou.


Synopsis:

The title of Plato’s Academy is a little misleading because no Greek sages are in sight. Rather the film’s Greeks are four scruffy lay-abouts, three of whom own convenience stores at the same quiet Athens intersection. This allows them to sit and guzzle coffee or beer all day while studying the hard-working foreign laborers who have invaded “their” neighborhood.


Curator's note:

A hilarious satire, Plato's Academy (2009), is the purest comedy in this assembly. Released at a time when Albanian and Chinese immigrants flooded the country to take on low-paid jobs, it skewers Greeks’ xenophobic attitudes, and exposes their existential fears.


Tonia Kazakopoulou is a Lecturer in Film & Television at the University of Reading. Her research interests include women's cinema of small nations, and particularly of Greece; contemporary European and world cinemas; the politics of representation in film and television. She has been the curator of the international standing conference Contemporary Greek Film Cultures, and is the co-editor of the book Contemporary Greek Film Cultures form 1990s to the Present (Peter Lang, 2017). She has also published on women's cinema, on Greek women screenwriters, on contemporary Greek cinema and motherhood, as well as on the female characters in Yorgos Lanthimos's films.


Book Tickets

Sunday 16 Mar 20256:30pm
Thursday 17 Apr 20253:30pm

Red Shift (12A)

Red Shift

Our screening on Thursday 30 January will be introduced by writer and filmmaker Adam Scovell, and will be followed by a post-film discussion in the cinema bar.


Directed by John Mackenzie (The Long Good Friday), this acclaimed and long-unseen BBC TV Play for Today from 1978 is adapted by Alan Garner from his own complex and enthralling sci-fi fantasy novel.


Red Shift takes the viewer on a beguiling voyage through English history, spanning three distinct time periods: Roman Britain, the English Civil War and 1970s modern day. Garner’s play tells the story of three troubled young men, Tom, Thomas and Macey, who occupy these different eras and are haunted by shared visions. They are connected through a shared location (Mow Cop in south Cheshire) and by the discovery of mystical talisman: an ancient axe-head.


Exploring themes of mysticism, folklore and geography that are common in Alan Garner’s fantasy novels, Red Shift is a uniquely compelling Play for Today from the golden age of BBC drama.


Contains scenes of implied rape.

Book Tickets

Thursday 30 Jan 20256:00pm
Monday 10 Feb 20253:00pm

Rocco and His Brothers (15)

Rocco and His Brothers

Italian maestro Luchino Visconti’s epic drama follows a mother and her five sons who move from a small town to Milan, changing their lives forever. This hypnotically beautiful tale of relocation, loss and sacrifice became a huge influence on the work of Francis Ford Coppola and Martin Scorsese. Starring the legendary Alain Delon in one of his most iconic roles, Rocco and His Brothers is considered one of the last neo-realist films and bridges the gap wonderfully between the old and the new in terms of both story and artistry


Book Tickets

Saturday 18 Jan 20255:00pm
Monday 20 Jan 20252:00pm
Thursday 23 Jan 20252:00pm

Strella (18)

Strella

The screening on Sunday 2 March will be introduced by Prof. Dimitris Papanikolaou.


Synopsis:

Yorgos is released from prison after 14 years of incarceration for a murder he committed. He meets Strella, a young trans sex worker. They spend the night together and soon they fall in love. But the past is catching up with Yorgos.


"I think that Strella is perhaps the most important cultural contribution in recent years to thinking about oedipalization within queer kinship, as well as about contemporary challenges to understandings of sexuality and kinship, all through a meditation on very contemporary modes of living and loving that nevertheless draw on ancient norms." - Judith Butler, Dispossession: The Performative in the Political (with A. Athanasiou, 2013)


Dimitris Papanikolaou is Professor of Modern Greek and Comparative Cultural Studies and Fellow of St. Cross College, University of Oxford. He studied Classics, Modern Greek and Comparative Literature at the University of Athens and University College London (London).








Book Tickets

Sunday 2 Mar 20256:30pm
Thursday 20 Mar 20253:30pm

Suntan (18)

Suntan

Synopsis:

Kostis is a 40-year-old doctor that finds himself in the small island of Antiparos, in order to take over the local clinic. His whole life and routine will turn upside down when he meets an international group of young and beautiful tourists and he falls in love with Anna, a 19-year-old goddess.


Curator's note:
A brilliantly idiosyncratic film that sits slightly outside of the Weird Wave constellation, SUNTAN (2016), resists classification. Half uproarious comedy, half thriller, the film shares the bleak satirical undertones of Dogtooth and Attenberg whilst turning expectations for a typical Greek island holiday story on their head.

Book Tickets

Thursday 6 Mar 20253:30pm
Sunday 23 Mar 20256:30pm

The Comic Strip Presents: Red Top, Four Men In A Car & The Hunt for Tony Blair (18)

The Comic Strip Presents: Red Top, Four Men In A Car & The Hunt for Tony Blair

The second of two special nights celebrating 'Comic Strip Presents.'


The screening will be followed by a Q&A with Writer-Director Peter Richardson and Maxine Peake.


The Comic Strip launched the careers of many of Britain’s best loved comedy talents, including Ade Edmundson, Rik Mayall, Dawn French, Jennifer Saunders, Robbie Coltrane, Nigel Planer, Peter Richardson, Keith Allen, and Alexie Sayle.


This is a rare chance to enjoy a triple bill of three 'Comic Strip Presents' films: Red Top, Four Men In A Car and The Hunt for Tony Blair.  


Redtop (2016)

Top of the bill is the satire on The News Of The Word's phone hacking scandal Red Top. Red Top has not been seen Theatrically in London's West End since 2016, when it first aired on TV's UK Gold. This stars Maxine Peake as Rebekah Brooks, Nigel Planer as Rupert Murdoch, and Stephen Mangan as Tony Blair turned hippie.


Four Men In A Car (1998)

Rarely theatrically screened, this film sees four salesmen, namely, Ade Edmondson, Rik Mayall, Peter Richardson and Nigel Planer who all share the car journey from hell on their way to a sales conference where only one of them will be selected for promotion.  


The Hunt for Tony Blair (2012)

The critically acclaimed The Hunt for Tony Blair is a monochrome Brit-Noir homage, starring Stephen Mangan as Tony Blair, and Jennifer Saunders as Margaret Thatcher. This was nominated for BAFTA and British Comedy awards, amid much press acclaim nationally.

Book Tickets

Sunday 19 Jan 20257:00pm (Sold Out)

The Devils (18)

The Devils

Our screening on 9 January is introduced by BFI artist's moving image Curator William Fowler and followed by a post-film discussion group in the cinema bar.


In seventeenth century France, Father Urbain Grandier (Oliver Reed), uses his powers to protect the city of Loudun from destruction at the hands of the establishment. Soon, he stands accused of the demonic possession of Sister Jeanne (Vanessa Redgrave), whose erotic obsession with him fuels the hysterical fervour that sweeps through the convent.


With its bold and brilliant direction, magnificent performances, exquisite Derek Jarman sets and sublimely dissonant score by Sir Peter Maxwell Davies, The Devils stands as a profound and sincere commentary on religious hysteria, political persecution and the corrupt marriage of church and state.


Original UK theatrical version.

Book Tickets

Monday 20 Jan 20253:00pm (Sold Out)

The Florida Project (15)

The Florida Project

This film was proposed by our member Alan Divito, who writes: 'An overlooked film I think fits to be screened at The Garden Cinema.'


Young Moonee and her mother Halley live in a motel close to Disney World, but they can only dream of going there. Instead Moonee turns her world into a theme park, while Halleey finds ways to make money.


Sean Baker’s (Anora, Tangerine) dazzlingly colourful drama explores the flipside of the American Dream, and cements his position as one of cinema’s most exciting filmmakers. Featuring an Oscar-nominated performance from Willem Dafoe as motel manager Bobby.


Please note, the screening on Wednesday 22 January is our Free Members' Screening, while the regular screening on Wednesday 29 January is open to the general public.

Book Tickets

Wednesday 22 Jan 20256:00pm (Booking opens 16 Jan, 13:00) (Sold Out)
Wednesday 29 Jan 20258:30pm

The Girl with the Needle (15)

The Girl with the Needle

Both eerie and exquisite, writer-director Magnus von Horn's latest film tracks young factory worker Karoline as she struggles to survive in post-WWI Copenhagen. When she ends up unemployed, abandoned and pregnant, the charismatic Dagmar takes her in to help run an underground adoption agency for unwanted children. The two women form an unexpected bond, until a sudden revelation changes everything. Based on a chilling true story, The Girl with the Needle presents a masterful gothic vision with profound contemporary resonance.


The Garden Cinema View:


The Girl with the Needle - Denmark's entry for the 2025 Academy Awards - is an unsettling fairy tale based on one of the country’s darkest chapters. Writer-director Magnus von Horn transforms this piece of Danish crime history into a bleak meditation on those marginalised by society. The eerie effect is aided by some uncanny and grotesque sequences exquisitely crafted by cinematographer Michał Dymek (EO). Faces and surfaces are seedily textured and the imagery veers towards the abject, evoking the work of Francisco Goya, Joel-Peter Witkin, and early David Lynch. For those who appreciate forms of art that explore alienation and the macabre, this is an essential, singular vision. For maximum impact, viewers are advised to experience the film's shocking narrative without prior research.


Book Tickets

Wednesday 22 Jan 20258:10pm
Thursday 23 Jan 20255:40pm

The Goonies- 40th Anniversary (PG)

The Goonies- 40th Anniversary

A gang of kids try to stop ruthless property developers from building a golf course on their beloved den - and somehow get mixed up in an adventure involving treasure maps, human skulls, crazy gadgets, snogging, murderous crooks and a pirate king called One-Eyed Willie! Can the Goonies survive Willie's booby traps and get their hands on the old rogue's hidden riches? Or will the scheming Fratelli gang get there first - and make our heroes walk the plank?


On Sunday mornings our Family Screenings are followed by a free activity for Children.


The screening is Pay What You Can, which means you’re free to pay as much or as little as you can afford. By paying for a ticket, you will enable us to keep offering Pay What You Can screenings to families struggling with the cost of living. Thank you

Book Tickets

Saturday 8 Mar 202511:00am
Sunday 9 Mar 202511:00am

The Land Before Time (U)

The Land Before Time

Executive produced by Steven Spielberg and George Lucas, The Land Before Time, follows an orphaned brontosaurus named Littlefoot. After a devastating earthquake Littlefoot teams up with other young dinosaurs in order to reunite with their families in The Great Valley.


The screening will be preceded by the children's short film Discord (6 min, Directed by Jen Lim, supported by Kino Short Film). Tensions rise at a young girl’s first lesson with her new piano teacher leading to an unexpected twist.


The Sunday screening is a Special Fundraiser with all proceeds to benefit Soho Parish Primary School.


On Sunday mornings our Family Screenings are followed by a free activity for Children.


The screening is Pay What You Can, which means you’re free to pay as much or as little as you can afford. By paying for a ticket, you will enable us to keep offering Pay What You Can screenings to families struggling with the cost of living. Thank you

Book Tickets

Saturday 18 Jan 202511:00am
Sunday 19 Jan 202511:00am

The London International Animation Festival presents Spectacular Animated Shorts for 6 - 14 year-old (PG)

The London International Animation Festival presents Spectacular Animated Shorts for 6 - 14 year-old

We’ve dug deep into the LIAF archives and have selected 7 of the best short animated films full of visually dazzling joy from all around the world, for kids of all ages and the whole family.


Here you will meet charismatic characters such as a group of bonkers playful singing children, a frog in a school class of rabbits and the mysterious Burry Man - in a series of stunning visuals mixed with captivating storylines, showing that animation is the best tool to transform the everyday into the magical.


Animation is the most imaginative and engaging of all art forms and is the perfect platform to enthral and inspire the wide-open imaginations of kids. This programme, carefully selected with our youngest audience in mind, is always popular, and not a toy ad in sight.


For more information about the London International Animation Festival and our programmes please look at the website at www.liaf.org.uk


Films Screening:


Latitude du printemps

An abandoned dog by the side of the road, a young astronaut wannabe and a professional cyclist and the connection between all three.

France 2020 Dir: Various 7min


The Most Boring Granny in the World

Greta has the most boring grandma in the world. When she falls asleep on the sofa, Greta gets the idea to play ‘funeral’ with her, initiating a sensitive conversation about death and memory.

Germany 2022 Dir: Damaris Zielke 7 min


A Film About a Pudding

Ronin’s dropped groceries start to mix and bubble, transforming into a small pudding. Over the next few days, the pudding grows bigger and bigger.

UK 2021 Dir: Roel Van Beek 9 min


Burry Man

When a Pictish farm is besieged by an endless winter, an adolescent girl must defy her father and his traditions to venture out beyond their family glen in search of a mysterious figure, the Burry Man.

UK 2022 Dir: Simon P Biggs 6 min


Migrants

Two polar bears are driven into exile due to global warming. They encounter brown bears along their journey, with whom they try to cohabitate.

France 2021 Dir: Various 8 min


A Stone in the Shoe

A student arrives in his new class. He is not a student like the others – he is a frog in a class of rabbits.

France 2020 Dir: Eric Montchaud 12 mins


Choir Tour

A world-famous boys’ choir goes on tour. In the hands of their conductor they are obedient but when he gets trapped in an elevator they become playful children.

Latvia 2012 Dir: Edmunds Jansons 5 mins


On Sunday mornings our Family Screenings are followed by a free activity for Children.


The screening is Pay What You Can, which means you’re free to pay as much or as little as you can afford. By paying for a ticket, you will enable us to keep offering Pay What You Can screenings to families struggling with the cost of living. Thank you

Book Tickets

Saturday 1 Mar 202511:00am
Sunday 2 Mar 202511:00am

The Red Balloon (U)

The Red Balloon

This film was proposed by our member Mandy Russell.


Albert Lamorisse’s exquisite The Red Balloon remains one of the most beloved children's films of all time. In this deceptively simple, nearly wordless tale, a young boy discovers a stray balloon, which seems to have a mind of its own, on the streets of Paris. The two become inseparable, yet the world’s harsh realities finally interfere. With its glorious palette and allegorical purity, the Academy Award–winning The Red Balloon has enchanted film lovers, young and old, for generations.


This is a 'Pay What You Can' Family Screening, which means you’re free to pay as much or as little as you can afford. By paying for a ticket, you will enable us to keep offering Pay What You Can screenings to families struggling with the cost of living. Thank you


On Sundays our family screenings are followed by a free activity for children.

Book Tickets

Monday 17 Feb 202511:30am
Tuesday 18 Feb 202512:30pm

The Seed of the Sacred Fig (15)

The Seed of the Sacred Fig

Shot entirely in secret, Mohammad Rasoulof's award-winning thriller, The Seed of the Sacred Fig, centers on a family thrust into the public eye when Iman is appointed as an investigating judge in Tehran. As political unrest erupts in the streets, Iman realizes that his job is even more dangerous than expected, making him increasingly paranoid and distrustful, even of his own wife Najmeh and daughters Sana and Rezvan.

Book Tickets

Friday 7 Feb 20258:30pm
Saturday 8 Feb 20255:10pm
Sunday 9 Feb 20257:00pm
Monday 10 Feb 20254:50pm
Tuesday 11 Feb 20252:00pm
Wednesday 12 Feb 20258:30pm
Thursday 13 Feb 20258:30pm

The Tales of Beatrix Potter (U)

The Tales of Beatrix Potter

Mr. Jeremy Fisher, Mrs. Tiggy-winkle, Jemima Puddle-duck, Squirrel Nutkin, Pigling Bland – indeed all the delightful and famous Beatrix Potter characters – come to life in this colourful and imaginative musical interpretation of her tales, choreographed by Sir Frederick Ashton, composted and scored by John Lanchbery, and danced by members of the Royal Ballet. Five of the famed Victorian author’s most well-known stories – with guest appearances of characters from other themes – have been linked to present an enchanting story-line that will thrill adults and children alike.


On Sunday mornings our Family Screenings are followed by a free activity for Children.


The screening is Pay What You Can, which means you’re free to pay as much or as little as you can afford. By paying for a ticket, you will enable us to keep offering Pay What You Can screenings to families struggling with the cost of living. Thank you

Book Tickets

Saturday 15 Feb 202511:00am
Sunday 16 Feb 202511:00am

The Wicker Man (15)

The Wicker Man

The Wicker Man screens in our British Cinema, 1970-1980 season as it was originally exhibited in 1973, as part of a double bill with Don't Look Now. With an introduction from filmmaker and actor Tim Plester  


They do things differently on Summerisle. They teach of Christianity in passing, but their own beliefs are more ancient... the strange, mysterious customs and rituals of distant places and bygone half forgotten days. But Summerisle is no distant South Pacific atoll - it is a small, remote, privately owned, twentieth-century island off the western coast of Scotland. To Summerisle comes Sergeant Howie of the Western Highland Police, investigating the alleged disappearance of twelve-year-old Rowan Morrison. What starts as a routine enquiry becomes a terrifying nightmare for this devout churchgoer.


Tickets for The Wicker Man and Don't Look Now may be purchased separately. Alternatively, a £5 discount applies for those wishing to get the full 1970s double-programme experience. Add tickets for both screenings and proceed to checkout where the discount will be automatically applied.  

Book Tickets

Sunday 19 Jan 20251:30pm (Sold Out)

The Wild Robot (U)

The Wild Robot

Wild Robot is nominated for Best Animated Film and Best Children's and Family Film at the BAFTAs 2024.


From the co-director of How to Train Your Dragon comes an incredible journey of survival, love and selflessness, featuring gorgeous animation and stunning voice performances


Sentient robot Roz is marooned on an island and must learn from its animal inhabitants how to survive. When outside forces threaten the island’s ecosystem, she will do anything to protect her adopted environment and Brightbill, the young goose she has nurtured since birth. Funny, sweet and subtle in its messaging, this adaptation of Peter Brown’s book series is a treat for the whole family.


On Sunday mornings our Family Screenings are followed by a free activity for Children.


The screening is Pay What You Can, which means you’re free to pay as much or as little as you can afford. By paying for a ticket, you will enable us to keep offering Pay What You Can screenings to families struggling with the cost of living. Thank you

Book Tickets

Saturday 25 Jan 202511:00am
Sunday 26 Jan 202511:00am

Vermiglio (15)

Vermiglio

1944. In Vermiglio, a high mountain village of the Italian Alps where war looms as a distant but constant threat. The arrival of Pietro, a refugee soldier, disrupts the dynamics of the local teacher’s family, changing them forever. During the four seasons marking the end of World War II, Pietro and Lucia, the eldest daughter of the village teacher, instantly drawn to each other, leading to marriage and an unexpected fate. As the world emerges from tragedy, the family will face its own.


Winner of the Silver Lion Grand Jury Prize at Venice Film Festival and Italy’s Entry to the Oscars.


Jane Campion has written an open letter praising the film:  

"Vermiglio has put a spell over me... I feel deep appreciation for Maura Delpero’s formidable skills as a director."


The Garden Cinema View:


Set in a village beneath Mount Boai, Vermiglio's sophisticated cinematography and sound design immerses you in the wildly beautiful landscapes and sounds of the Alps, transporting us to a simpler era untouched by modern technology. Taking place during WWII in 1944, it's interesting to monitor the behaviours and interactions of people of this specific time and place. The characterisation of each member of this extended family is entirely convincing - not least due to the great performances from the cast. Through this journey, the film poses several questions. Should a military deserter be protected or condemned? Is the patriarch truly loving or deeply oppressive? Does the mother of numerous children find fulfilment in her role, or is she merely enduring it?


Despite the film's many merits, some of these themes could have been explored in greater depth. Nevertheless, Vermiglio has an engaging narrative, featuring fully fledged characters offering a powerful snapshot of a vanished era.

Book Tickets

Saturday 18 Jan 20251:00pm6:15pm
Sunday 19 Jan 20255:00pm (Sold Out)
Monday 20 Jan 20258:20pm
Tuesday 21 Jan 20256:00pm
Wednesday 22 Jan 20255:40pm
Thursday 23 Jan 20258:10pm

Video Bazaar presents: The Shout (15)

Video Bazaar presents: The Shout

As part of the landmark season at the Garden Cinema, Visions in Ruins: British Cinema 1970-1980, Video Bazaar is proud to present Jerzy Skolimowski’s legendary and mystifying piece of Folkloric esoterica, The Shout, starring John Hurt and Alan Bates. This screening will also feature a pre-recorded video introduction from Paul Duane, director of All You Need is Death.


Released in 1978, and adapted from a short story by Robert Graves, The Shout is a deeply unsettling exploration of power, madness, and mysticism. Crossley (Bates), a mysterious drifter, intrudes upon the quiet rural life of Anthony Fielding (Hurt), an experimental composer who lives on the North Devon coast. Claiming mastery of an ancient Aboriginal 'death shout', Crossley begins to exert a sinister influence on Anthony and his wife, Rachel (Susannah York).


Emerging at a time of national upheaval and cultural experimentation, The Shout is a haunting film that evokes arcane knowledge and non-Western philosophies. Crossley’s invocation of Aboriginal shamanic practices reflects this fascination while raising unsettling questions about cultural exploitation and control. Set against the bleak Devon countryside, the film also taps into the eerie isolation of rural Britain, underscoring a growing disconnection from the modern world, and creating a timeless, otherworldly atmosphere.


With its ethereal cinematography and an experimental score crafted by Tony Banks of Genesis, The Shout is as much an auditory experience as a visual one. The rich layers of ambiguity and surrealism establish it as one of the most unique cinematic experiences in British film history, with every metaphor unravelling a new secret.


This screening is presented by the cult film collective, Video Bazaar, who are proud to show this rarely screened film, and are dedicated to bringing the weird and the obscure to London audiences at The Garden Cinema.




Book Tickets

Tuesday 21 Jan 20258:30pm (Sold Out)

Wicked (PG)

Wicked

After two decades, the beloved and enduring stage musical makes its journey to the big screen as a spectacular, generation-defining cinematic event. The untold story of the witches of Oz stars Cynthia Erivo as Elphaba, a young woman, misunderstood because of her unusual green skin, who has yet to discover her true power, and Ariana Grande as Glinda, a popular young woman, gilded by privilege, who has yet to discover her true heart. As they forge an unlikely friendship, their extraordinary adventures will see them fulfill their destinies as Glinda the Good and the Wicked Witch of the West.


On Sunday mornings our Family Screenings are followed by a free activity for Children.


The screening is Pay What You Can, which means you’re free to pay as much or as little as you can afford. By paying for a ticket, you will enable us to keep offering Pay What You Can screenings to families struggling with the cost of living. Thank you

Book Tickets

Saturday 22 Feb 202511:00am
Sunday 23 Feb 202511:00am