If you’re not able to attend the Q&A screening of McEnroe at Curzon Mayfair, worry not! Find your nearest cinema and discover where to catch the intimate portrait of one of the most explosive sporting icons of all time on the big screen. IN CINEMAS NOW.
London - DocHouse (Curzon Bloomsbury) - from 15 July
London - ICA - from 15 July
London - Chiswick Cinema - from 15 July
London - Curzon Camden - from 15 July
London - Curzon Wimbledon - from 15 July
London - Everyman Muswell Hill - from 15 July
London - Covent Garden ODEON - from 15 July
London - Wimbledon ODEON - from 15 July
London - Richmond ODEON - from 15 July
London - Vue Finchley Road - from 15 July
London - Vue Islington - from 15 July
London - Vue Westfield Stratford - from 15 July
London - Vue Westfield - from 15 July
Aberdeen - Belmont Filmhouse - from 15 July
Bradford - Science Media Museum - from 22 July
Brighton - ODEON - from 15 July
Bristol - Cribbs Causeway Vue - from 15 July
Cheshire - Vue Cheshire Oaks - from 15 July
Cork - Gate Cinema - from 15 July
Coventry - Warwick Arts Centre - from 9 August
Dublin - Irish Film Institute (IFI) - from 15 July
Edinburgh - Filmhouse - from 15 July
Edinburgh - Omni Vue - from 15 July
Glasgow - Film Theatre (GFT) - from 15 July
Guildford - ODEON - from 15 July
Kingston - ODEON - from 15 July
Leeds - Vue Light - from 15 July
Manchester - HOME - from 15 July
Manchester - Printworks Vue - from 15 July
Manchester - Great Northern ODEON - from 15 July
Milton Keynes - Stadium ODEON - from 15 July
Plymouth - Vue - from 15 July
Newcastle - Tyneside - from 15 July
Sheffield - ODEON - from 15 July
Tunbridge Wells - ODEON - from 15 July
London - Enfield Cineworld - from 15 July
London - West India Quay Cineworld - from 15 July
Cardiff - Cineworld - from 15 July
Glasgow - Everyman - 17 July
Milton Keynes - Cineworld - from 15 July
Stevenage - Cineworld - from 15 July
London - Everyman Barnet - 26 July
London - Everyman Crystal Palace - 26 July
London - Everyman King's Cross - 26 July
Edinburgh - Everyman - 26 July
Bristol - Everyman - 26 July
Cardiff - Everyman - 26 July
Chelmsford - Everyman - 26 July
Harrogate - Everyman - 26 July
Leeds - Everyman - 26 July
Liverpool - Everyman - 26 July
Wallingford - Corn Exchange - from 29 July
Halifax - Square Chapel - from 30 July
Shetland - Mareel - from 30 July
Chichester - New Park Cinema - from 5 August
Keswick - Alhambra Cinema - from 5 August
Telford - Wellington Orbit - from 5 August
Coventry - Warwick Arts Centre - from 9 August
Oswestry - KinoKulture Cinema - 18 August
Spalding - South Holland Arts Centre - 17 August
Stamford - Arts Centre - 1 September
Tewkesbury - The Roses Theatre - from 22 August
Taunton - Brewhouse - 25 August
Gainsborough - Trinity Arts Centre - from 2 September
Woodbridge - Riverside Theatre - from 14 August
McEnroe is an intimate portrait of one of the most explosive and compelling sporting icons of all time. John was an era-defining talent, Number One in the world in four consecutive years, but also a man prone to self-destruction. It’s this internal conflict that drove John to the very top, and very nearly broke him too. McEnroe features completely unseen film archive from some of the biggest matches in tennis history – including the US Open and Wimbledon - as well as home video footage from John himself. Contributions from John’s children and his wife Patty Smyth provide a level of intimacy that takes the film beyond a mere sports biopic and into the realms of something deeply personal and confessional. Featuring icons such as Billie Jean King, Bjorn Borg and Keith Richards, the film brings to life a golden age of tennis and the 80’s excess of John’s hometown: New York City. Beyond John’s tennis legacy (his combined 149 titles still rank as the highest in the Men’s Open era), John’s story grows to become a search for connection, a journey towards acceptance of himself and others. Compassionate, human and heartfelt, McEnroe is the definitive portrait of a force of nature powered by the beating heart of New York. In cinemas 15 July.