WYRE Forest Film Club is back for another season of movies unlikely to be seen at the multiplexes.

A series of Monday night screenings at Kidderminster will run until the end of March, featuring a variety of lesser-known favourites and cult classics.

First up on Monday, February 1 is Everything, a hard-hitting 2004 drama starring Ray Winstone as a man who visits a prostitute in a dirty north London room but just wants to talk to her, returning every day for a week.

In Foreign Land, screened a week later, the lives of a young man from Sao Paolo and a poor Brazilian woman collide in Lisbon when the man agrees to act as courier for a suspect package. The 1995 tale is in Portugese with subtitles.

The Class, showing on February 15, won the Palme d'Or at the 2008 Cannes Film Festival. The French drama is an absorbing journey into a multicultural high school in Paris over the course of a school year.

On February 22, Close to Home, from 2005, tells the story of Israeli girl soldiers on patrol in Jerusalem, looking at the difficulties and dangers for both sides on the Middle East divide.

Following that, Wendy and Lucy is a touching story of a young woman heads for Alaska in search of work, with only her golden retriever for company.

Two weeks later, Tilda Swinton stars in 2007’s The Man from London, a French movie about a harbour master who witnesses a murder and recovers a case of stolen cash.

Filmed in the same year, Far North, showing on March 22, features Sean Bean as a Loki who helps a young woman being hunted by soldiers in Lapland.

The final presentation, on March 29, is Honour of the Knights, based on the story on Don Quixote.