Museum Lichtspiele

Film theater in Munich

48°07′51″N 11°35′15″E / 48.13083°N 11.58750°E / 48.13083; 11.58750OwnerMuLi Muc GmbHTypeMovie theaterCapacity280ConstructionBuilt1910Opened24 November 1910Renovated2013Websitewww.museum-lichtspiele.de

The Museum Lichtspiele (German: [muˈzeːʊm ˈlɪçtˌʃpiːlə]) is a movie theater in Munich, Germany. It is situated in the district Au next to the Deutsches Museum and along the Isar bank.

Established in 1910, it is Munich's oldest still operational movie theater and known for showing English-language blockbusters and art movies, as well as The Rocky Horror Picture Show since its 1977 premiere in Germany.

History

The cinema was established in 1910 by German actor and businessman Carl Gabriel [de], who had previously built Gabriel Filmtheater among cinemas in all of Germany. It replaced the previous restaurant Zum Kaisergarten and operated for 8 years under the name Gabriels Tonbildtheater until adopting its current popular name to reflect the proximity to the Deutsches Museum.[1]

The building saw a much-needed renovation in the summer of 2013, which involved renewing the electricity and air conditioning to comply with new fire protection regulations. The cinema reopened in October of the same year with the movie The Butler.[2][3]

Program

The movie theater's marquee in August 2021

In four auditoria, Museum Lichtspiele shows a number of international movies and blockbusters in English, plus locally produced or dubbed children's movies in German.

Auditorium 2 showing The Rocky Horror Picture Show

However, it is most well known for its traditional showings of the cult-classic The Rocky Horror Picture Show each Friday and Saturday night in the uniquely decorated auditorium 2. Since its debut in 1977, Rocky Horror has become one of the main pieces of merchandise and was widely celebrated on its 40-year anniversary in 2017. It is still running as of 2023 and remains one of the theater's most reliable sources of income.[4]

References

  1. ^ "100 Jahre Museum Lichtspiele in der Au". Bild München, Nr. 271. 19 November 2010.
  2. ^ Germany, Abendzeitung (30 October 2013). "Eine Schau, diese Rocky-Horror-Sanierung". www.abendzeitung-muenchen.de (in German). Retrieved 3 April 2023.
  3. ^ "Vorhang auf, Film ab! • LICHT". lichtnet.de (in German). Retrieved 3 April 2023.
  4. ^ Crone, Philipp. "Museum Lichtspiele: 40 Jahre Rocky Horror Picture Show". Süddeutsche.de (in German). Retrieved 3 April 2023.

Media related to Museum Lichtspiele (München) at Wikimedia Commons

  • Official Website