Downton Abbey: The Grand Finale set to debut in Kendal
Multiple screenings of the film start today at Kendal Brewery Arts Centre, featuring special sessions for parents and babies, with tickets from £10.50 including concessions.
- Downton Abbey: The Grand Finale, the final film in the franchise, premiered in theaters nationwide on September 12, 2025, with multiple screenings at Kendal Brewery Arts Centre.
- The film brings closure to the story of the Crawley household during the 1930s, a time of significant social shifts, evolving relationships, and an uncertain future after 15 years of narrative development through the original series and its two previous films.
- Writer Julian Fellowes intended this finale to offer fans closure on the characters' paths while emphasizing acceptance of change, capturing the era’s transition and the franchise’s natural end.
- Tickets cost £10.50 with concessions for seniors, students, and under 26s, including a commission fee that supports venue upkeep, and Brewery Members receive a 10% discount on most events.
- The film’s release signals the close of the Downton Abbey saga in its current form and invites audiences to reflect on both the historical changes depicted and the franchise’s legacy.
13 Articles
13 Articles
After 15 years, the successful series "Downton Abbey" comes to an end. A finale full of splendour and feeling.
Joanne Froggatt and Laura Carmichael Share DOWNTON ABBEY Memories
With Downton Abbey: The Grand Finale now in theaters, the beloved franchise has officially come to an end. BroadwayWorld's Richard Ridge sat down with stars Joanne Froggatt (Anna Bates) and Laura Carmichael (Lady Edith), who shared memories from their experiences making a series that continues to connect with viewers worldwide. "The memories are just the people, really. Everything that we've shared as a cast and a crew, all of the incredible mem…

'Downton Abbey' creator Julian Fellowes embraces ‘change’ for 'Grand Finale'
The cast of ‘Downton Abbey: The Grand Finale.’ (Rory Mulvey) After six seasons on TV and two movies, Downton Abbey is saying goodbye with a third and final film, Downton Abbey: The Grand Finale. Series creator and writer Julian Fellowes says there’s a good reason he decided the story needed one more film. He tells ABC Audio that after the last movie, where they said goodbye to Maggie Smith‘s Dowager Countess of Grantham, he felt that after 15 ye…
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