top of page
CIN STAR WITH TEXT LOGO new.webp
THU 21
FRI 22
SAT 23
SUN 24
TUE 26
WED 27
Branch

COMING SOON

28 Years Later: The Bone Temple

Nearly three decades after the Rage virus reshaped Britain, small pockets of survivors cling to fragile systems of belief and protection. When a group journeys toward a mysterious stronghold known as the Bone Temple, they confront not only infected horrors but the unsettling ways humanity has evolved in isolation.

Director

Nia DaCosta (Candyman)

Actors

Jodie Comer • Aaron Taylor-Johnson • Ralph Fiennes • Jack O’Connell • Erin Kellyman

1h 50m • Rated R16 • Horror, Thriller • UK

Jungle
ZKZg.gif

LOADING...

BOOKINGS NOT YET AVAILABLE FOR

28 Years Later: The Bone Temple

BOOK SEATS

All tickets must be prepaid online or at the counter.
Sales are subject to our cancellation policy. No phone bookings

ncp - no complimentary passes

cap - captioned for hard of hearing

Man in Nature

What makes this film such a compelling big-screen experience is its confidence and ambition. Nia DaCosta brings a fresh perspective to the franchise, blending visceral horror with psychological unease and striking imagery. The performances ground the film emotionally, giving weight to its bleak landscapes and brutal choices. Tense, atmospheric and deeply unsettling, The Bone Temple rewards audiences looking for horror that doesn’t just shock, but lingers — a bold continuation that proves this world still has disturbing new stories to tell.

Film Notes

A chilling new chapter that pushes survival horror into darker, stranger territory.

28 Years Later: The Bone Temple expands the world first imagined in 28 Days Later, shifting the focus from immediate outbreak panic to the long-term consequences of survival. The story explores a Britain transformed by time, where remnants of civilisation have hardened into ritual, myth and fear. As the characters move deeper into unfamiliar territory, the film reveals how belief systems form in the absence of order, and how violence can become institutional rather than chaotic. The sense of dread is cumulative, built not just from infected threats but from the unsettling logic of human survival under extreme conditions.

bottom of page