Village Screen

Village Screen is a rural and community touring cinema providing quality film screenings in community venues throughout Norfolk & Suffolk. 

Volunteer promoting groups get together to screen the latest blockbuster or a timeless classic in the comfort of their local village hall or community centre.
 
Since 2005, Village Screen has become a vibrant and growing network of voluntary groups organising screenings for and with rural communities across Norfolk & Suffolk. Film events create opportunities for neighbours to meet, socialise and renew bonds. Less travel and lower cost makes this the obvious choice for many rural residents.

For more information about any of these events, or to view latest updates, please refer to

www.creativeartseast.co.uk/whats-on

15 May, 1pm – ‘The Light Between Oceans’ (12A, 2016)

Long Stratton Village Hall, Long Stratton (£5 – includes refreshments)

“A lighthouse keeper and his wife living off the coast of Western Australia raise a baby they rescue from a drifting rowing boat.”

17 May, 7.00pm – ‘Eye in the Sky’ (15, 2016)

The Memorial Hall, Snettisham, King’s Lynn (£4)

“Col. Katherine Powell, a military officer in command of an operation to capture terrorists in Kenya, sees her mission escalate when a girl enters the kill zone triggering an international dispute over the implications of modern warfare.”

17 May, 7.30pm – ‘Manchester by the Sea’ (15, 2016)

Thornham New Village Hall, Thornham (£5)

“A depressed uncle is asked to take care of his teenage nephew after the boy’s father dies.”

18 May, 7.30pm – ‘Fences’ (12A, 2016)

Great Massingham Village Hall, Great Massingham (£4)

“A working-class African-American father tries to raise his family in the 1950s, while coming to terms with the events of his life.”

18 May, 2.30pm – ‘Manchester by the Sea’ (15, 2016)

Gorleston Library, Gorleston (£4)

19 May, 7.30pm – ‘A United Kingdom’ (12A, 2017)

Brisley Village Hall, Dereham (£4.50)

“Prince Seretse Khama of Botswana causes an international stir when he marries a white woman from London in the late 1940s.”

19 May, 7.30pm – ‘Sully’ (12A, 2016)

Alburgh Village Hall, Alburgh (£4)

“The story of Chesley Sullenberger, an American pilot who became a hero after landing his damaged plane on the Hudson River in order to save the flight’s passengers and crew.”

Village Screen

20 May, 7pm – ‘La La Land’ (12A, 2016)

Barton Bendish Village Hall, King’s Lynn (£4)

“A jazz pianist falls for an aspiring actress in Los Angeles.”

20 May, 7.30pm – ‘A United Kingdom’ (12A, 2017)

Tittleshall Village Hall, King’s Lynn (£4.50)

20 May, 7.30pm – ‘Sully’ (12A, 2016)

Weston Longville Village Hall, Weston Longville (£5)

20 May, 7.30pm – ‘Sully’ (12A, 2016)

Marlingford Village Hall, Marlingford (£4.95, BYOB)

20 May, 7.30pm – ‘The Light Between Oceans’ (12A, 2016)

Watlington Village Hall, Watlington (£5)

20 May, 7.30pm – ‘Sully’ (12A, 2016)

Bawdeswell Village Hall, Bawdeswell (£4.50)

25 May, 2pm & 7.30pm – ‘Fences’ (12A, 2016)

Masonic Rooms, Harleston (£4)

25 May, 7.30pm – ‘Manchester by the Sea’ (15, 2016)

Downham Market Town Hall, Downham Market (£5)

25 May, 1.45pm – ‘The Importance of Being Earnest’ (12A)

Capel St Mary Library, Capel St Mary (£8)

“National treasure and Poirot star David Suchet starred as the formidable Lady Bracknell in Oscar Wilde’s much loved masterpiece The Importance of Being Earnest.”

25 May, 2.30pm – ‘Maxine Peake as Hamlet’ (12A, 2014)

Southwold Arts Centre, Southwold (£10)

“Shakespeare’s most iconic work, Hamlet explodes with big ideas and is the ultimate story of loyalty, love, betrayal, murder and madness.”

26 May, 7.30pm – ‘Eye in the Sky’ (15, 2016)

Aylsham Town Hall, Aylsham (£5)

26 May, 7.30pm – ‘Lion’ (PG, 2017)

Hempnall Village Hall, Hempnall (£5 – includes refreshments)

“A five-year-old Indian boy gets lost on the streets of Calcutta, thousands of kilometers from home. He survives many challenges before being adopted by a couple in Australia; 25 years later, he sets out to find his lost family.”

26 May, 7pm – ‘The Railway Children’ (12A, 2015)

Felixstowe Library, Felixstowe (£7.50)

“Roberta, Phyllis and Peter, three sheltered siblings, suffer a huge upheaval when their father, who works for the Foreign Office, is falsely imprisoned.”

30 May, 7.30pm – ‘Lion’ (PG, 2017)

Walsingham Parish Hall, Walsingham (£4)

1 June, 7.30pm – ‘Lion’ (PG, 2017)

Loddon Lecture Hall, Loddon (£4)

1 June, 2.30pm – ‘The Railway Children’ (12A, 2015)

Southwold Arts Centre, Southwold (£10)

3 June, 7.30pm – ‘La La Land’ (12A, 2016)

Bawdeswell Village Hall, Bawdeswell (£4.50)

9 June, 2.30pm & 7.30pm – ‘La La Land’ (12A, 2016)

Blofield Court House, Blofield (£4.50)

10 June, 7.30pm – ‘Lion’ (PG, 2017)

Bawdeswell Village Hall, Bawdeswell (£4.50)

creative arts east

Creative Arts East is an arts and community development charity founded in 1994 with the focus of taking the arts into rural communities. Creative Arts East works throughout Norfolk, Suffolk & the East running Creative Arts East Live! & Village Screen – rural touring schemes for live performance and cinema; and a variety of projects concerned with creative learning, health & wellbeing and volunteer development.