Experience the quintessential Romantic ballet in Peter Wright’s atmospheric and bewitching production.
3 Mar: Tue 7.15pm
Follows Elvis Presley, featuring never-before-seen footage and recordings.
27 Feb–5 Mar: Mon 3pm; Tue 4pm; Thu 3pm; Fri 6.15pm; Sat & Sun 5pm
When scientists discover a way to transform human consciousness into robotic animals, Mabel uses the new technology to uncover mysteries of the animal world that are beyond anything she could have ever imagined.
28 Feb–1 Mar: Sat & Sun 12.15pm, 3pm & 5.45pm
Mirren puts on a crown once more to play at being the Queen. Filmed at London’s West End, The Audience finds HRH taking audiences with each of the twelve Prime Ministers of her reign in a play written by The Queen screenwriter Morgan.
26 Feb: Thu 7pm
When a new Ghostface killer emerges in the town where Sidney Prescott has built a new life, her darkest fears are realised as her daughter becomes the next target.
26 Feb: Thu 8pm
13 Feb–19 Feb: Mon–Thu 10am; Fri 12.45pm; Sat & Sun 10am
The paths of a master jewel thief (Chris Hemsworth) planning a final job and a disenchanted insurance broker (Halle Berry) cross. Meanwhile a relentless detective (Mark Ruffalo) is closing in as their lives intertwine in a high stakes game of cat and mouse centred around a multimillion-dollar heist along LA’s 101 freeway.
13 Feb–19 Feb: Fri–Thu 5pm & 8.15pm
Porky Pig and Daffy Duck become Earth’s only hope when their antics at the local bubble-gum factory uncover a secret alien mind-control plot. Faced with cosmic odds, they must save their town and the world while not driving each other totally looney.
14 Feb–19 Feb: Mon–Thu, Sat & Sun 10.15am
Director Emerald Fennel (Saltburn, A Promising Young Woman) puts her iconic spin on this brand new, highly anticipated adaptation of Emily Bronte’s novel. Set on the wild, West Yorkshire moors, the story of Wuthering Heights follows two landed gentry families, the Earnshaws and the Lintons. At its heart is the intense and destructive relationship between the Earnshaws’ foster son, Heathcliff, and Catherine Earnshaw. Influenced by Romanticism and Gothic fiction, it stands as a classic of English literature.
13 Feb–18 Feb: Mon 1.30pm & 4.45pm; Tue, Wed & Fri–Sun 1.30pm, 4.45pm & 8pm
Resident Choreographer Wayne McGregor’s experimental ballet triptych inspired by the genre-defying works and writings of Virginia Woolf, set to an original score by Max Richter.
9 Feb: Mon 7.15pm