Bringing in Baby: Misbehaviour (12A)
Plymouth College of Art
Tavistock Place
Plymouth
Devon
PL4 8AT
Prices
Standard Ticket: £9
OAPs (over 60), Students and Unwaged: £7.75. Please bring proof of eligibility.
25 and Under: £4. Please bring ID, and check the age rating of the film when booking. No other concessions or discounts can be applied to this price.
Plymouth College of Art Staff and Students: £4. Please bring proof of eligibility.
Friends: 75p discount and £7 tickets on Tuesdays
Matinees: £7
Online bookings: add £1.50 booking fee per transaction. This fee helps to pay for maintaining and operating the website and booking system (this fee is waived for Friends).
Bringing in Baby: £8.50 (includes a hot drink)
CEA Cardholders: The Card enables a disabled cinema guest to receive a complimentary ticket for someone to go with them when they purchase a full price ticket (£9). The CEA Card is a national scheme developed for UK cinemas by the UK Cinema Association (UKCA). Please book by phone or in person.
About us
For parents, grandparents and carers of babies under 12 months to enjoy a sociable trip to the cinema. The lights are left on so that you and baby can move around if you need to, and don't worry about baby making a noise! All tickets £8.50, hot drink included. Café and Box Office open from 10.30am.Dir. Phillipa Lowthorpe, UK, 2020, 106 mins. Cast. Keira Knightley, Gugu Mbatha-Raw, Keeley Hawes, Jessie Buckley, Rhys Ifans.
In 1970, the Miss World competition took place in London, hosted by US comedy legend Bob Hope. At the time, Miss World was the most-watched TV show on the planet with over 100 million viewers. Claiming that beauty competitions demeaned women, the newly formed Women's Liberation Movement achieved overnight fame by invading the stage and disrupting the live broadcast of the competition. Not only that, when the show resumed, the result caused uproar: the winner was not the Swedish favourite but Miss Grenada, the first black woman to be crowned Miss World. In a matter of hours, a global audience had witnessed the patriarchy driven from the stage and the Western ideal of beauty turned on its head. A brilliantly entertaining account of a pivotal moment. The screening on Friday 17th will be a Reclaim The Frame Event.