Access to the Church, and our Temporary Underground Cinema!

 Update; December, 2022: 
To anyone reading this page now, the roof work is now complete and the building is fully re-opened. Our film nights are back in the main hall, and we can use the entrance on Grove Road.

We have witnessed a number of truly cataclysmic events in the past year or so: a Global Pandemic; an attempt to overthrow the Government in the US; the catastrophic but entirely foreseeable fallout from Brexit.

And then the Church Roof Collapsed.

Okay, I suppose a leaking roof isn't the worst problem most of us have had to face this year (the horrors never stop: all the local grocery stores are completely out of grapefruit juice; truly we are living through Armageddon) but 

    (a) it is symptomatic of the kind of year this has been, and

    (b) it does mean that we won't be organising these film evenings in the usual Church Hall.


While the fearless roofers and scaffolders tirelessly wage their battles against the Forces of Entropy and British Weather, we shall be gathering in the Church basement for our movie nights. Technically, I suppose that means we will be assembling in the Crypt. Is the basement of a Church always a Crypt? For what it's worth, this particular Crypt is more of a Basketball Court:


...but whatever you want to call it, it will be our home from home until they can stick the roof back on the building.

So: don't be surprised if you arrive on Thursday to find that the Church has apparently been put in a box. Take my word for it; the building is still there! To get inside however, you will need to use the entrance around the corner on Bunsen Street:


What do you mean, "What Entrance?" You mean you don't see the door built into the side of the panelling - the door that has been cleverly constructed to look exactly like the surrounding wall, so that enemy agents will never be able to breach the perimeter?

Trust me; it's there - it really is. And it will be open on Thursday evening at 7pm, so that everyone who feels like it will be able to walk in and watch Casablanca in a Crypt. Basketball Court. Cinema, by the time we get through with it.

We're going to be talking about this year for the rest of our lives.

Since this posting hasn't really had much to say about movies, I thought I should leave you with a little film clip.

The film Walk on the Wild Side (1962) has just been released on DVD and Blu Ray (its first UK release).

Apart from being a remarkable and ground-breaking film (Barbara Stanwick portrays one of Hollywood's first openly lesbian characters) Walk on the Wild Side features one of the best (and sexiest!) opening credits sequences ever filmed - created by the legendary Saul Bass.

Enjoy:








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