FILMS to catch this February at the Memo Arts Centre, Barry are:

The Boxtrolls (PG) on Wednesday, February 18 at 10am for a half term Cine-Memo showing.

Lovingly-crafted stop-motion animation ‘The Boxtrolls’ tells the tale of a young boy’s adventure with the Boxtrolls, a group of adorable, underground-dwelling monsters.

Inhabiting caves below the streets and combing through people’s rubbish, the kind and quirky Boxtrolls are misunderstood by humans, with the exception of Eggs – an orphan boy they have raised as their own. When the lovable monsters find themselves under threat from an exterminator, Eggs must try to save his adoptive family.

Then on the same day will be two screenings of Magic in the Moonlight (12A) at 1pm and 7pm.

This 1920s-set romantic comedy ‘Magic In The Moonlight’ follows an English magician who is sent to the home of a wealthy family to expose a spiritualist as a charlatan.

Stanley (Colin Firth) is a British stage magician who travels to the south of France to debunk a young clairvoyant named Sophie (Emma Stone) who may or may not be exploiting a socialite family. But the accuracy of Sophie’s predictions and her beguiling character cause Stanley to question his own scepticism.

‘Magic In The Moonlight’ is the latest feature from Woody Allen, following his Oscar-winning drama ‘Blue Jasmine’.

Tickets for the film cost £4.50 in advance or £5.50 on the door.

Then on Monday, February 23 will be the showing of Before I Go To Sleep (15) at 1pm and 7pm.

‘Before I Go To Sleep’ follows Christine, a woman with a debilitating memory problem who realises that there is something amiss about the story she is being fed.

After a catastrophic accident in her 20s, Christine (Nicole Kidman) wakes up every day unable to remember anything from after the accident. One day she uncovers some new truths and they send her into a state of paranoia – can she trust the people she relies on the most?

‘Before I Go To Sleep’ is adapted from S J Watson’s best-selling novel and also features Colin Firth and Mark Strong.

Tickets for the film cost £4.50 in advance or £5.50 on the door.