Cambridge Cinema, Conversations with Friends

From the small to big screen, here are your May on-screen essentials

Read our accompanying Local Hero interview with Jonathan Rhodes (Life’s Too ShortBelgravia, The Crown) here.

Conversations with Friends

After the rampant success of Normal People last year, another Sally Rooney adaptation arrives this summer. 

Where to Watch: BBC Three and Hulu | When: May, release date TBC

Elizabeth: A Portrait in Parts

Roger Michell’s posthumous film picks apart the longest-reigning British monarch’s rule. 

Where to Watch: In cinemas and on Amazon Prime | When: 3 June

Stranger Things

Everyone’s favourite 80s-set sci-fi returns, as a group of high-schoolers handle the fallout of the previous season’s battle. 

Where to Watch: Netflix | When: May 27

Great Freedom

Racking up an impressive number of awards, this is a poignant study of the criminalisation of love.

Where to Watch: Mubi | When: May 6

Back to the Source

Cambridge jazz musician Robin Phillips heads out on the road, from Chicago to New Orleans, in this documentary filmed by Domininkas Zalys.

Where to Watch: YouTube, available now

Back to the Source, available on YouTube

Picturehouse Picks

From a season presented by Gaspar Noé to theatre firsts, there’s lots to look forward to at the Picturehouse this month

This Much I Know to be True

Andrew Dominiks follows in the footsteps of his last Nick Cave feature, One More Time with Feeling. The film captures Nick Cave and Warren Ellis’ exceptional creative relationship,  as they form their albums.

May 11, 8.30pm

Gaspar Noé presents: Bird with the Crystal Plumage 

As part of a new season, ‘Culture Shock’, Gaspar Noé unveils films that fed into his own latest, Vortex, starting off with Dario Argento’s gem.

May 16, 8.30pm

VAMPYR 90th Anniversary 

Celebrate nine decades of Carl Theodor Dreyer’s creepy, spine-tingling, black and white classic. A traveller arrives at a countryside inn – and is pulled into a mystery that crosses the realms of the living and dead.

May 22, 3pm

NT Live: Straight Line Crazy 

Spearheaded by Ralph Fiennes as Robert Moses, David Hare’s play deconstructs the concept of democracy in a New York setting. Broadcast live from the Bridge Theatre in London and directed by Nicholas Hytner.

May 26, 7pm

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