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Director: Jordan Peele
Cast: Daniel Kaluuya, Keke Palmer, Brandon Perea
Year: 2022

The latest film from groundbreaking writer/director Jordan Peel (Get Out, US)

The residents of a lonely gulch in inland California bear witness to an uncanny and chilling discovery.

The screenings on Wed 14 Sep at 7.30pm and Thu 15 Sep at 2pm will have Descriptive Subtitles.

  • 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.

  • Information about screenings with Audio Description

    Audio description is commentary that aims to describe body language, expressions and movements to blind or visually impaired audience members, thereby offering additional information about the film through sound. Our cinema is equipped with a system that delivers audio description through a headset. The audio description runs each time the film is shown and is undetectable to anyone not wearing a headset.

    Many of our cinema screenings have an audio description facility. If you would like to use it when visiting our cinema, please let the Box Office know when booking your tickets. You can also let us know this by using the access requirements box when booking online

  • Information about screenings with descriptive subtitles

    Descriptive subtitles, sometimes referred to as subtitles for D/deaf and hard-of-hearing people or captions, transcribe dialogue and relevant aspects of the soundtrack, including music and sound effects, attempting to give D/deaf and hard-of-hearing viewers an equal experience to those who are able to watch films without descriptive subtitles. Descriptive subtitles would include speech identifiers and descriptive elements such as [door slamming] and [kettle whistling].

  • BBFC Ratings Info (May Contain Spoilers)

    injury detail

    There are splatters of blood and viscera as an animal is shot off-screen, and from other fantastical off-screen violence. There is sight of a wound across a man’s eye which has been sliced by a falling object.

    language

    There is strong language (‘f**k’, ‘motherf**ker’), as well as milder terms such as ‘bitch’, ‘shit’, ‘ass’, ‘dick’, ‘hell’, ‘God’ and ‘damn’, and a reclaimed use of racial language (‘n***a’).

    threat and horror

    A chimpanzee goes on a violent rampage in a television studio and a young performer looks traumatised as he hides under a table witnessing the mayhem. There are sustained scenes of threat to characters from an alien entity, with long build-ups of tension and jump scares.

    There is moderate violence. There are infrequent moderate sex references, as well as drug references. There are brief, grainy documentary images of natural world violence between a tiger and a python.