Book & Buy

Dementia friendly screenings

Tickets are just £5, and free for the accompanying carer.

Our dementia-friendly screenings have no adverts or trailers and the lighting remains slightly raised throughout the film. Although these screenings are particularly designed for people living with dementia, they are open to the general public too.

Refreshments are served before the film to give audience members a chance to socialise and familiarise themselves with the venue, and guests are welcome to move around as needed.

Please be aware that pastoral care is not provided at these screenings and that a friend, family member or carer must also be in attendance.

Thank you to Iceland Foods who have kindly provided the refreshments for our Dementia-friendly screenings.

Upcoming films & eventsTell me when something is added

Bridget Jones 4 still 2Bridget Jones 4 poster

Bridget Jones: Mad About the Boy

2h 5m | 15

The fourth in the series of British romantic comedies.

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Brief EncounterBrief Encounter

Brief Encounter

1h 26m | PG

Returning home from a shopping trip to a nearby town, bored suburban housewife Laura Jesson is thrown by happenstance into an acquaintance with virtuous doctor Alec Harvey

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Richard Gere & Julia Roberts: Pretty WomanPretty Woman poster

Pretty Woman

1h 59m | 15

When successful corporate mogul Edward Lewis meets independent and carefree hooker Vivian Ward, their two lives are worlds apart.

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The Best Exotic Marigold HotelThe Best Exotic Marigold Hotel poster

The Best Exotic Marigold Hotel

2h 4m | 12A

A group of British retirees travel to India to take up residence in what they believe is a newly restored hotel. Less luxurious than its advertisements, the Marigold Hotel nevertheless slowly begins to charm in unexpected ways...

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The Full MontyThe Full Monty poster

The Full Monty

1h 31m | 15

Six unemployed steel workers form a male striptease act

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The DukeThe Duke poster

The Duke

1h 35m | 12A

In 1961, Kempton Bunton, a 60-year old taxi driver, stole Goya’s portrait of the Duke of Wellington from the National Gallery in London. It was the first (and remains the only) theft in the Gallery’s history

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