A Haunting In Venice


Screening Times
The Power Station screenings are located on 3rd Floor, Turbine Hall B, Battersea Power Station
The Arches screenings are located on 22 Arches Lane, Circus West Village, Battersea Power Station
Please select your preferred cinema from the tabs above:
In The Power Station
These screenings are located on 3rd Floor, Turbine Hall B, Battersea Power Station
To book, please select a time from below:
Friday 6th October
Saturday 7th October
Sunday 8th October
Monday 9th October
Wednesday 11th October
Thursday 12th October
Alternatively please call the Box Office on:
020 3330 7120
In The Arches
These screenings are located on 22 Arches Lane, Circus West Village, Battersea Power Station
To book, please select a time from below:
Thursday 5th October
Friday 6th October
Saturday 7th October
Sunday 8th October
Monday 9th October
Tuesday 10th October
Wednesday 11th October
Thursday 12th October
Alternatively please call the Box Office on:
020 3330 7120
To book, please select a time from below:
Thursday 5th October
Friday 6th October
Saturday 7th October
Sunday 8th October
Monday 9th October
Tuesday 10th October
Wednesday 11th October
Thursday 12th October
Alternatively please call the Box Office on:
020 3330 7120
Info
Celebrated sleuth Hercule Poirot, now retired and living in self-imposed exile in Venice, reluctantly attends a Halloween séance at a decaying, haunted palazzo. When one of the guests is murdered, the detective is thrust into a sinister world of shadows and secrets.
Starring: Kenneth Branagh, Jamie Dornan, Michelle Yeoh, Tina Fey, Ali Khan, Kelly Reilly
Director: Kenneth Branagh
Writer: Agatha Christie, Michael Green
Running Time: 103 minutes
Certificate: 12A
Language: English
Genre: Drama, Mystery, Crime
Country: United Kingdom, United States
"Whodunnit purists might take offense at the brazen artistic license on display, but this brand-new story makes for edge-of-your-seat viewing."
★★★★ Lucas Hill-Paul, Daily Express (uk)
“Third time’s the charm for a franchise that’s found its groove, ironically by changing the record.”
★★★★ Neil Smith, Total Film
