BARRY Memo has some great films lined-up for March.

On Monday, March 2 they will be showing Gone Girl (18). Suspenseful mystery ‘Gone Girl’ follows the investigation into the disappearance of missing Amy Dunne as dark truths about her seemingly perfect life emerge.

To the outside world, Nick Dunne (Ben Affleck) and his wife Amy (Rosamund Pike) appear content and happy. But when Amy mysteriously disappears and the police begin to scratch beneath the glossy veneer of their lives, ugly truths are uncovered and evidence suggests that Nick is somehow involved.

‘Gone Girl’ is adapted from Gillian Flynn’s critically acclaimed novel of the same name and is directed by David Fincher (The Social Network).

On Monday, March 9 will be the witty and sophisticated comedy, My Old Lady (12A).

Kevin Kline stars as Mathias, a down-and-out New Yorker who goes to Paris to sell a valuable apartment he inherited from his father. He finds ‘My Old Lady’, Mathilde (Maggie Smith), living there – who refuses to leave. He learns that he will not actually own the apartment until Mathilde dies, and so decides to share it with her. He soon realises that it creates many inconveniences. Eventually, Mathias learns that his father and ‘My Old Lady’ were more than just landlord and tenant, and that the three of them are connected in unexpected ways.

On Monday, March 16 will be the screening of Night Train To Lisbon (12A). Raimund Gregorius (Jeremy Irons) is a Swiss Languages Professor who leads a buttoned-down routine more devoted to literature than love or living.

After a chance encounter with a Portuguese woman he finds himself with a fascinating, inscribed copy of a book by an author who fought against dictator Antonio de Oliveira Salazar. Along with the book is a train ticket to Lisbon. In a split second decision he is boarding the train and on his way through a journey that will connect him, the story of the author and the author’s wartime friends in a moving revelation of human interconnectedness.

This philosophical film that poses questions about destiny, self-determination and memory is adapted from the popular eponymous novel by Pascal Mercier. Jeremy Irons leads an all-star cast of interconnected characters in a plot that unfolds across the world, linking a series of stories, to unravel the mystery of one man.

For all films there will be a showing at 1pm and 7pm and tickets cost £4.50 in advance or £5.50 on the door.