CINE North has unveiled a new season of films for community cinemas including Keighley and Glusburn.

The project aims to bring “cinema to your doorstep” with a network of 46 rural and community venues across Yorkshire, and Cumbria.

Keighley Film Club hosts the movies at the town’s Picture House while Glusburn Institute will also show films regularly.

Other venues include Amerdale Hall, Arncliffe; Kettlewell Village Hall; Grassington Town Hall; Gargrave Village Hall; Carleton Village Hall; and for the first time Burton in Lonsdale Village Hall

The season runs from September 2016 to January 2017, featuring a diverse selection of cinema chosen by local venues for their communities.

Across the network Cine North promises the best in home-grown independent films such as Dad’s Army and Eddie The Eagle, eye-opening feature documentaries such as He Named Me Malala, family favourites like Zootropolis, and box office hits including Florence Foster Jenkins and The Dressmaker.

Cine North aims to improve access to cinema in isolated rural and hard to reach urban areas of the North of England.

The project in Yorkshire is delivered by the National Media Museum in Bradford.

Cine North offers community venues a tailored package of training, technical advice, screening equipment, programming and promotional support, enabling them to screen a locally-chosen cinema programme.

Visit cinenorth.co.uk for full listings, venues and booking details.

Cine North said it was delighted to also present a series of special events as part of the BFI Britain On Film season, in partnership with Film Hub North and the Yorkshire Film Archive.

A spokesman said: “Moving North: Rural is a new touring programme of locally tailored film screenings and events showing BFI’s Britain on Film at its very best.

“Drawing on the collections of the Yorkshire, North East and North West Film Archives, a programme of film screenings, exhibitions, and short film compilations will reveal the most astonishing variety of archive footage made in, and about, rural communities across Yorkshire, Cumbria and the North East of England.”