Thrills, chills, love and laughs - there's a film for every mood. Settle in, dim the lights and pick your flick!
Classic Ealing comedy about a scotch-laden ship that runs aground off the Hebridean coast.
A father runs away with his autistic son on a journey of escape and self-discovery.
Returning to England on the Orient Express, Hercule Poirot must investigate a murder.
After a dream wedding turns into a nightmare, five friends face a fight for their lives.
Puss teams up with a fellow thieving feline and Humpty Dumpty to go on an exciting quest.
Before his rise to power, young Coriolanus Snow mentors at the tenth Hunger Games.
Work in a macho outback community鈥檚 pub proves problematic for two female backpackers.
In Thailand, a group of boys and their football coach are trapped in a system of caves.
An unsuccessful singer-songwriter wakes up in a world where no-one remembers The Beatles.
Resistance fighters smuggle gold reserves out of Norway before the Nazis invade.
A puritan police officer arrives on a Scottish island in search of a missing girl.
Acclaimed mystery about a couple grieving the loss of their daughter in a tragic accident.
Retired captain Ludvig Kahlen fights to settle on a remote heathland.
Cold War thriller about a retired MI6 agent who must track down a Soviet mole.
A biographical drama about American soul singer Aretha Franklin.
A terminally ill single father searches for a new family to take in his young son.
While passing the time by watching his neighbours, a man believes he witnesses a murder.
A transatlantic trip brings romantic problems for showgirls Lorelei and Dorothy.
Charles Ryder (Matthew Goode) recalls his involvement with the aristocratic Flyte family.
The rise and decline of the Kray twins, London's most legendary gangsters.
Four people spend the night in Hill House, which is said to be haunted.
Two unlikely partners in a bounty-hunting scam join forces in a new venture.
An English tailor in Chicago is forced to treat the bullet wound of a mob boss's son.
Wallace invents a 'smart gnome' that has a mind of its own - or does it?