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Terms & Conditions

Please read the following terms and conditions. By using this website ("Website") you are taken to consent to these terms and conditions ("Terms").

About Oundle Cinema
This Website is operated by Oundle Cinema of 47 West Street, Oundle, Peterborough PE8 4EJ.

Copyright
Unless stated otherwise, copyright and other intellectual property rights in the contents ("Contents") of this Website are owned by, or licensed to, Oundle Cinema. You may only print (or download to disk) the Contents for the purpose of private and personal non-commercial use, and may not otherwise copy, reproduce, distribute, republish, download, display, post or transmit, in any form whatsoever, or by any means, the contents without the express permission of Oundle Cinema (Please see "Further Inquiry").

Use of material
The Contents are for general information only. The contents are not intended to address specific requirements or form specific advice. Oundle Cinema gives no warranty as to the accuracy, completeness or fitness for purpose of the Contents or for keeping the Contents up-to-date and accepts no liability resulting from your use of the Contents.

Privacy
Oundle Cinema is committed to protecting your privacy. Oundle Cinema agrees to treat all personal information you supply in accordance with the Data Proctection Act.

Oundle Cinema will respect your e-mail privacy, and will only send you unsolicited mail if you have agreed to this. Oundle Cinema will not pass on any individual user details (including your e-mail address) unless Oundle Cinema has your prior consent.

Third party websites
This Website contains links to other websites. These websites are not operated by Oundle Cinema and are outside the control of Oundle Cinema. Oundle Cinema accepts no responsibility whatsoever for these websites or their contents.

Exclusion of liability
Oundle Cinema does not accept liability of any description, including liability for negligence (except for personal injury or death), or any damages or losses (including, but not limited to, indirect or consequential loss, or loss of business, revenue, profits, use or opportunity) howsoever arising from your use (or inability to use) this Website or the Contents.

Governing law
This website and these Terms are governed exclusively by English law and are subject to the exclusive jurisdiction of the courts of England and Wales.

Revision
Oundle Cinema reserves the right to revise the Terms at any time.

Further Inquiry
Please apply to Oundle Cinema, chrisgill@oundlecinema.org.uk

Oundle Cinema is incorporated as a Company Limited by Guarantee, number 5703829

Stahl  season

Up (U)

This sharp yet sweet fantasy reaffirms the Disney/Pixar stable as world leaders in great animation. A story of life, dreams and fulfilments - eventually. An elderly widower, who had dreamed of being an explorer, but now faces eviction and the remaining years of his life in care, decides on radical measures … [more]

The Hurt Locker (15)

'War is a drug' declares this thrilling film, filled with the suspense of a real bomb squad. Set in the current Iraq conflict it is a film that will not embarrass any particular political faction. It looks at the nature, the psychology, the inner strain of being part of the conflict … [more]

Broken Embraces (15)

Another wonderfully pictorial film from the master of serious kitsch - Almodovar. Another film with Penelope Cruz, one where she plays two (or is it three?) roles. A film which is easy to view, but then haunts with its allusions, whether they are to the Third Man, or to Audrey Hepburn … [more]

Departures (12A)

A failing symphony orchestra, in which the debt-ridden Daigo plays the cello, finally folds. With his wife, he returns to to his deceased mother's rural community to look for work. Desperate for employment, he answers an ad for work in what he thinks is a travel company … [more]

Moon (15)

A lone astronaut (played by Sam Rockwell) and a robot (Gerty – spoken by Kevin Spacey) provide one of the more interesting and off-beat films of the season, directed by David Bowie's son, Duncan Jones. A sci-fi film with a human twist set in the possible near future. The astronaut is managing the mining of global energy … [more]

An Education (12A)

Swinging London in the early 1960's - this fascinating film finds the mark. A film about a schoolgirl and a society, based on the journalist Lyn Barber's memoir of growing up in Twickenham and beyond... On course to go to Oxford, she encounters infatuation for an older man, petty thieving, high society, jazz, suburban caricatures … [more]

White Ribbon (15)

This is a tour-de-force, a film which confirms Haneke as the European director. Set in the North German plain in a rural community just before the Great War, the film sits on various different levels. It could be just a thriller, a who-dunnit … [more]

Julie & Julia (12A)

A film for foodies and lovers of Meryl Streep and comedy. This is a trans-Atlantic conceit: two food memoirs, two cooks folded together. The New Yorker and call-centre worker Julie, in her pokey American kitchen, sets out to cook and blog her way all through ‘Mastering the Art of French Cooking’ - Julia Child’s classic cookery book, written for Americans … [more]