Shirley (15)
Postponed
Fri 13 Nov 2020 - Thu 19 Nov 2020
Category
Price
£8* (£5*)
Time
Various times
Fri 13 Nov 2020 - Thu 19 Nov 2020
Price
£8* (£5*)
Time
Various times
Exeter Phoenix is temporarily closed. Thank you for all your wonderful support, energy and enthusiasm for Studio 74 and our film programme. It has been wonderful to welcome you back and to be sharing great films with you once more. We will be temporarily closing (again) from Thu 5 Nov and this screening has been postponed. Our box office team are getting in touch with all ticket holders to let them know their options.
We thank you for your patience as a reduced team works through these events. Stay tuned to our Front Room Phoenix as we have some excellent virtual cinema offers lined up for you, including exclusive Q&A events. We will keep in touch and be ready to welcome you back when it is safe to do so. Thinking of you all.
There is no denying that your return to the cinema will be a little different to usual. Find out more about the extra measures we have put in place and what you can expect from your trip to the cinema here >>
Dir. Josephine Decker
2020 | 107 mins | USA
I’m a witch, didn’t anyone tell you?
When we first meet Shirley (Elisabeth Moss), soon to become America’s queen of horror fiction, she seems to be no such thing; just a sad, drunken shut-in, married to a cheating English professor (Michael Stuhlbarg) and blocked as a writer. But with the arrival of Rose (Odessa Young) and her teaching-assistant husband Fred (Logan Lerman), Shirley reveals herself as a far crueller and more sophisticated creature, seducing the innocent girl into becoming her companion and accomplice in the new mystery novel she is writing.
Edward Albee’s Who’s Afraid Of Virginia Woolf is clearly a touchstone, but Josephine Decker’s psychodrama goes further, blurring the boundaries of biopic and fiction in exploring the cruel forces that can feed creativity.
F-Rating is a new rating for films directed by women, written by women and/or with significant female characters on screen, in their own right. Find out more here >>
Shirley is Triple F-Rated – directed by a woman, written by a woman and starring a significant woman.