Home | Genesis Cinema

Vote us for Cinema of the Year

BIFA Cinema of the Year Award, supported by Kia The award is voted for by you, the audience, so if you love us and what we do please vote for us- the first round of voting runs from now until Monday 22 September

Learn More

Hire Our Spaces

Learn More

View Our Gallery

Dark Yellow Dot Award Winner!

What's On

View All

24 September

A Big Bold Beautiful Journey

Running time: 108 mins

An imaginative tale of two strangers and the unbelievable journey that connects them.

Demon Slayer: Kimetsu no Yaiba Infinity Castle - Subtitled

Running time: 155 mins

As the Demon Slayer Corps members and Hashira engaged in a group strength training program, the Hashira Training, in preparation for the forthcoming battle against the demons, Muzan Kibutsuji appears at the Ubuyashiki Mansion. With the head of the Demon Corps in danger, Tanjiro and the Hashira rush to the headquarters but are plunged into a deep descent to a mysterious space by the hands of Muzan Kibutsuji. The destination of where Tanjiro and Demon Slayer Corps have fallen is the demons' stronghold – the Infinity Castle. And so, the battleground is set as the final battle between the Demon Slayer Corps and the demons ignites. In Japanese with English Subtitles.

Ackroyd & Harvey: The Art Of Activism + Q&A

Running time: 80 mins

When does practice become protest? Or protest, poetry?

Award-winning documentary filmmaker Fiona Cunningham-Reid presents an intimate portrait of internationally acclaimed artists Heather Ackroyd and Dan Harvey, who work at the intersection of art, activism, biology and ecology.Uncompromisingly preoccupied with the climate and ecological crisis, Ackroyd & Harvey's work has become a rallying cry for the environmental movement, winning them international acclaim and a global following.

With some of their pieces standing in prestigious galleries and others embedded in nature, their work not only references the natural world, but also regularly employs it.

The film offers singular access into the lives, work and partnership of the artists, and their quest to shake humanity into action on climate catastrophe - whatever the personal cost - including their collaboration with Extinction Rebellion, and co-founding the movement Culture Declares Emergency.

Meticulous and thoughtful, this careful study of a lifelong creative partnership asks questions of where art and hope - and love - stand in our very uncertain world.

The screening will be followed by a Q&A with Fiona Cunningham-Reid.

Q&A

Bar Trash: Opening Night: DAY OF THE DEAD: 40TH ANNIVERSARY (1985)

Running time: 145 mins

As the world is overrun by zombies, a group of survivors sheltering underground must decide how to deal with the undead.

“THE DARKEST DAY OF HORROR THE WORLD HAS EVER KNOWN…”

Cult film night BAR TRASH continues with its 11th sensational season — SYNTHETIC FLESH! — a tribute to more than 100 years of monster makeup FX.

Opening night begins with host Token Homo unveiling the full SYNTHETIC FLESH! programme of 26 films. Then, he is stupidly proud to introduce one of the greatest — and goriest! — displays of monster makeup FX in the history of horror cinema, DAY OF THE DEAD (1985).

The final part in George A. Romero’s iconic LIVING DEAD trilogy, DAY OF THE DEAD comes after the initial zombie outbreak in NIGHT OF THE LIVING DEAD (1968), and the rise of the swarm in DAWN OF THE DEAD (1978). The film tells a new story of how the last remnants of humanity have taken refuge underground, seeking survival and a solution. Romero’s favourite of the original films, the Pittsburgh-based filmmaker described DAY OF THE DEAD as a “tragedy about how a lack of human communication causes chaos and collapse even in this small little pie-slice of society”.

The film’s jaw-dropping FX were designed by legendary makeup artist, actor, stunt performer, and director, Tom Savini. A former combat photographer during the Vietnam War, Savini is renowned for creating realistic gore FX, earning him the nickname ‘The Sultan of Splatter’ among a generation of slasher fans raised on FRIDAY THE 13TH (1980) and THE POWLER (1981). However, it was Romero’s two monster movies — DAWN OF THE DEAD and DAY OF THE DEAD — that won him wider recognition, nominated for a ’Saturn Award’ for Best Make-Up Effects in 1979 and winning in 1985.

“It took over a year for DAY OF THE DEAD to arrive in the UK after its original American release. I’d never been more excited to slip through my local cinema’s lax age controls to see a film I had been reading about for that entire time. Romero’s nightmare vision haunted me from the very first ‘hello’, but it was Savini’s extraordinary zombie makeup and gore FX that captured my teenage imagination. Howard Sherman’s performance as experimental zombie ‘Bub’ reveals the true heart of the monster under layers of latex and ranks alongside horror legends like Boris Karloff and Lon Chaney. I can’t wait to celebrate the film’s 40th Anniversary with you all.” (Token Homo)

Polite notice: We are projecting DAY OF THE DEAD with subtitles from the best available digital source. DAY OF THE DEAD contains scenes of extreme violence, very graphic gore, and discriminatory language. If you need to know more, read the BBFC’s content warning (itself a litany of horrors): https://www.bbfc.co.uk/release/day-of-the-dead-q29sbgvjdglvbjpwwc0zmziynzq

Programme supported by Film Hub London, managed by Film London. Proud to be a partner of the BFI Film Audience Network, funded by the National Lottery. www.filmlondon.org.uk/film-hub-london

/// BAR TRASH is a celebration of cult and curious cinema, hosted by queer film fanatic Token Homo and friends. Films are served with themed drinks, introductions, intermissions, prize giveaways, and subtitles / captions where possible. Tickets from £3.50. Adults 18+ only. Follow @tokenhomo or visit tokenhomo.com for all the gory details ///

Bartrash

20:30
American Pie: Soft Limit Cinema

Running time: 95 mins

Four teenage boys enter a pact to lose their virginity by prom night.

Soft Limit Cinema is a film club dedicated to programming screenings that explore themes of sex, sexuality and our evolving relationship to both.

Events

Honey Don’t

Running time: 89 mins

A new comedy from Ethan Coen follows Honey O'Donahue, a small-town private investigator, who delves into a series of strange deaths tied to a mysterious church. Starring Margaret Qualley, Aubrey Plaza, Charlie Day, and Chris Evans.

The Long Walk

Running time: 108 mins

From a visionary director of The Hunger Games franchise films, comes the highly-anticipated adaptation of Stephen King's novel set in a near-future where America has become a police state. The intense, chilling, and emotional thriller follows a group of teenage boys who are chosen to compete in The Long Walk, a brutal annual contest where the winner will be awarded whatever he wants for the rest of his life. But to win, they must maintain a steady walking speed without stopping... or get shot.

The Roses

Running time: 105 mins

Life seems easy for picture-perfect couple Ivy and Theo: successful careers, a loving marriage, great kids. But beneath the facade of their supposedly ideal life, a storm is brewing. As Theo's career nosedives while Ivy's own takes off, a tinderbox of fierce competition and hidden resentment ignites in a modern reimagining of The War Of The Roses, based on the novel by Warren Adler.

Weapons

Running time: 129 mins

When all but one child from the same class mysteriously vanish on the same night at exactly the same time, a community is left questioning who or what is behind their disappearance.

Visit our Kiosk

Open for the first film of the day.