WOULD you like to see some of the best films from around the world, shown on a big screen in Brentwood, and then discuss what you’ve seen with like-minded people?

The Brentwood Arts Cinema Club for film lovers meets to watch interesting films on a Sunday evening each month, except for a break in August.

The 2015 season starts on Monday, January 26, with The Lunchbox.

The award-winning short filmmaker Ritesh Batra’s debut feature highlights Mumbai’s legendary Lunchbox delivery service, which it’s said, never goes wrong.

Except when an accounts clerk on the brink of retirement suddenly receives the food, another man never appreciated, in a box that looks just like his own.

To read about the whole season of films, go to the club’s website brentwood-arts-cinema-club.co.uk and join by downloading and completing the membership application form.

Refreshments and film notes are available on the night and there is usually an informal discussion after the film.

Other films lined up for this season include Wes Anderson’s The Grand Budapest Hotel, The Motorcycle Diaries, which act as a memoir of a journey taken by famed Che Guevara, and 1957 Wild Strawberries, which is set in Sweden.

Brentwood Art Cinema Club was started in 2007, partly in response to the lack of cinema facilities in the town.

It is run by a committee of volunteers on a membership basis and aims to show films, both classics and more recent releases, which are not normally on general release.

English-speaking and foreign-language films, which are subtitled, are regulars in the programme.

Membership for the club costs £38, and includes the viewing of all 11 films.

Guests are welcome at screenings for a fee of £5, which take place at the United Reformed Church Hall, in New Road, Brentwood.

For more information and details on forthcoming events, call 07938 197939 or alternatively you can email bacc.contact@gmail.com