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In French with English subtitles.

£1.50 screening Thu 11 Jan at 7.30pm. 

From the Louvre to Buckingham Palace, to the gutters of Paris to the siege of La Rochelle… In a kingdom divided by religious wars and under threat of British invasion, a handful of men and women will battle and tie their fate to that of France.

Constance is kidnapped before D’Artagnan’s eyes. In a frantic quest to save her, the young musketeer is forced to join forces with the mysterious Milady de Winter. But as war is declared and Athos, Porthos and Aramis have already joined the front, a terrible secret from the past shatters all old alliances.As the King falls further and further under the control of Cardinal Richelieu, D’Artagnan and the Musketeers are the last bastions before chaos. But, drawn into a plot that threatens to put the country to fire and sword, fate presents them with a terrible choice: will they have to sacrifice those they love to complete their mission?

‘the main attraction was an irresistible Eva Green, mercurial and merciless as the treacherous Milady, a spy and general agent of mischief in the French court.’ – The Guardian ★★★★

‘director Martin Bourboulon’s Musketeers diptych delivers intense combat scenes, and an intoxicating turn from action antiheroine Eva Green’- British Film Institute 

Director- Martin Bourboulon

Writers – Matthieu Delaporte, Alexandre Dumas, Alexandre de La Patellière

Cast- François Civil, Vincent Cassel, Romain Duris

All tickets for the screening of The Three Musketeers: Milady at 7.30pm on  Thu 11 Jan will be just £1.50 per person (including booking fee).

  • Information about screenings with subtitles

    Information about screenings with subtitles

    Subtitled screenings offer captions which transcribe dialogue only. Subtitled screenings attempt to give D/deaf and hard-of-hearing viewers an understanding of the spoken dialogue within the film, but do not include description about other aspects of the soundtrack, including music and sound effects.

  • Seating accessibility information

    Cinema

    Seat size

    Seats in the Cinema are 45cm (172/3“) wide and 46cm (18“) deep, are 40cm (152/3“) from the floor, and have 12cm (42/3“) between seats.

    Armrests

    Seats in the Cinema have armrests that do not fold away, and cannot be completely removed.

    Legroom

    Seats in the cinema have 30cm (112/3”) of legroom in front of seats, with additional legroom on row A and seats B1-B4 and B11-B14.

    Further information

    If you have any questions about accessibility our Box Office team are always happy to help and can be contacted on 01642 525199 or by emailing [email protected] - you can also tell us about your access requirements when prompted to do so during the online booking process.

  • BBFC rating information (contains spoilers)

    Violence

    A person is hit by shellfire and is atomised by the explosion. There are multiple fight scenes in which swords, daggers, muskets and heavy objects are used as weapons. People are stabbed and slashed, but with minimal bloodshed or wound detail.

    Threat and horror

    An innocent woman is mistaken for a prisoner, and is led screaming to the gallows where she is hanged. Prisoners are tied to stakes on a shore and left to drown in the rising tide.

    Sex

    In a steamy scene, a kissing couple urgently undress and the man nuzzles the woman’s cleavage. There is no nudity.

    Injury detail

    A woman’s back is seen to have been branded with a red hot iron. A wounded man is tended to in hospital. The throat of a corpse is discreetly seen to have been cut. There is brief and discreet sight of other injuries.

    Suicide

    A prisoner vows to take her own life rather than suffer torture and execution by her captors.

    Sexual violence and sexual threat

    A woman hints at an abusive past.

    Disturbing images

    A woman stabs an attack dog. Burning horses flee a stable on fire. There is no real animal cruelty.

    Rude humour

    A man urinates, without sight of nudity. There is bawdy barrack room humour.

    Alcohol and tobacco

    People smoke tobacco.