London's best Halloween film screenings and motion picture list
Princes
Charles Cinema - for a vintage all-nighter
The West End's best option silver screen is stamping
Halloween with a sing-a-long screening of faction most loved The Rocky Horror
Picture Show on October 31 (£16). Book rapidly; it's practically sold out.
There are tickets accessible too for slasher exemplary Halloween on October 30
and 31 (£11).
Those with stamina in plenitude should seriously mull over
its Classic Horror All-Nighter on October 29 - including six vintage startling
motion pictures (Halloween, The Exorcist, Alien, A Nightmare on Elm Street, The
Shining, and The Texas Chainsaw Massacre), or the Teen Horror Movie Marathon
(The Craft, Scream, I Know What You Did Last Summer, Urban Legend, The Faculty
and Final Destination). That is a considerable measure of dreads for £20. Other spooky offerings over the Halloween weekend
incorporate the magnificent Pan's Labyrinth (October 30; £10).
Seeprincecharlescinema.com
The
Nomad - for floating frights
This meandering pop-up silver screen will screen The Blair
Witch Project at The Hoxton in Shoreditch on October 23 (£12.50); Little Shop
of Horrors at Farmopolis, a breakwater and nursery in Greenwich, on October 28
(£15); Ghostbusters at The Bloomsbury Hotel close Tottenham Court Road on
October 29 (£25); and Under the Shadow, an Iranian ghastliness, at The Lexi
Cinema in October 31 (£5-7). Tickets for the initial three incorporate a free
mixed drink and popcorn. See www.whereisthenomad.com
The
Electric Cinema - for all the gore
Notting Hill's finest is facilitating a dusk 'til dawn
affair that it's calling "The Gore Tour". On the cards is a
"gut-spilling night of instinctive ghastliness" with four movies from
four distinct nations: Blood Feast (US), Wolf Creek (Australia), Deep Red
(Italy) and Audition (Japan). Tickets cost £40 per individual for a rocker, or
£80 for a front bed or back couch. Expensive, however you do get welcome mixed
drinks, a half-time breakfast, and a renewing pack to bring home.
Seewww.electriccinema.co.uk
Picturehouse Central - for
werewolves and vampires
Travel back to the Eighties on October 29 with a parody
loathsomeness twofold bill at Picturehouse Central on Shaftesbury Avenue (£16).
The Lost Boys, featuring Corey Feldman, Jason Patric and Kiefer Sutherland,
will be trailed by An American Werewolf in London, by the virtuoso that is John
Landis.
Screen
on the Green - for fancy dress and demon babies
A late-night appearing of Rosemary's Baby, Roman Polanski's
mental loathsomeness, anticipates guests to Screen on the Green on October 29
(£15.20). Mixed drinks will stream and there is a prize on offer for the
best-dressed visitor. The Everyman Barnet will primate its focal London kin - yet
costs are less expensive (£13.30) Seewww.everymancinema.com
BFI
Southbank - for even more Exorcist
Too bad, the BFI Southbank's sci-fi twofold header is sold
out. Support yourself with The Exorcist - Director's Cut, highlighting an extra
11 minutes of head turning and shot retching. It's appearing on October 31.
Seewhatson.bfi.org.uk
The
Exhibit - for dinner with Jack
This
close film in Balham, with a solitary screen and comfortable couch seating for
around 30 individuals, offers supper and a motion picture (and a mixed drink)
for £25 per individual. On October 31 that motion picture will be The Shining.
Watch Jack lose his brain while slurping linguini vongole or a ridiculous
steak. See theexhibit.co.uk
The
Phoenix - for a Rocky Horror sing-a-long
Halloween comes right on time at the single-screen pearl in
East Finchley, with (another) sing-a-long screening of The Rocky Horror Picture
Show on October 22 (£12). Cross dressing discretionary. See phoenixcinema.co.uk
Everywhere
Blood and gore movies on general discharge incorporate The
Greasy Strangler, Ouija: Origin of Evil, and Train to Busan. None are probably
going to inconvenience the judges at the Academy Awards one year from now.
For a greater amount of the motion picture discharges, see
www.telegraph.co.uk/movies
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