Filmtheater Sendlinger Tor – Munich, Germany - Atlas Obscura

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Filmtheater Sendlinger Tor

This century-old cinema house has a marquee that has been hand painted by a single man for over 25 years. 

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Film posters are still painted by hand on the front of Filmtheater Sendlinger Tor, a 100 year-old movie theater just outside Sendlinger Tor, the southern gates of the Altstadt (historical city center).

The theater opened in October 1913 with a showing of the Italian silent film Marcantonio e Cleopatra (Cleopatra, die Herrin des Nils; Antony and Cleopatra), and has received over 25 million visitors. It is Munich’s largest single-screen theater, and has been owned by the PreĂźmar family for over 70 years.

For the past 25 years the posters at the theater have been painted by one RenĂ© Birkner, and are often completed in less than a night. Birkner is one of the few remaining film poster painters in all of Germany. The three-meter high posters often differ from those produced by the film production companies, giving the historic cinema a uniquely old world feel. The original posters are also striking given their size.

As movie theaters move towards homogenously garish megaplexes covered in design-heavy marketing tools, the Filmtheater Sendlinger Tor still provides the feel of artistry and grandeur that was once a hallmark of public cinema. 

Know Before You Go

It's right next to the Sendliger Tor metro station.

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