Blankenese cinema

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Blankenese cinema
Neon sign of the Blankeneser cinema
Blankenese cinema

The Blankeneser cinema is a cinema in the Blankenese station street in the Hamburg district of Blankenese . It is one of the few typical suburban cinemas in Hamburg that has outlasted the dying of cinema since the 1970s. The cinema is operated by the film theater operator Hans-Peter Jansen , who is mainly active with small regional cinemas with the Elbe-Filmtheater , Koralle-Kino , Studio Kino in Hamburg, ASTRA Filmtheater Plön and Burg Filmtheater Fehmarn .

The program focuses on premieres , films for children and young people, and challenging films.

The house has two projection halls with 91 seats each with projection screens of 30 m². The technical equipment includes Dolby Digital SR sound systems.

history

The Blankenese cinema was probably built as the Schauburg Blankenese in 1910 and opened in 1913, an address has not been recorded here. From 1920 onwards, a cinema called Tivoli-Lichtspiel or Film Palas Tivoli has been handed down from cinema address books at the current location, the [Blankeneser] Bahnhofstrasse 4 . In 1935 the auditorium was expanded to 400 seats and reopened in 1937 as Blankeneser Lichtspiele . Game operations continued until 1941. After the Second World War , the cinema was requisitioned by the British occupying forces and reopened to the general public in 1952. In 1983 the screening room was divided and converted into two rooms with 98 seats each. Since 1993 it has been called the Blankeneser Kino . In 1999, Hans-Peter Jansen and his wife Lydia Matern-Jansen took over the business and had the screening rooms completely renovated in the summer of 2015.

reception

The traditional cinema is the last of three film theaters in Blankenese. It has also been referred to as the " Holi of the West". The annual program of the Blankeneser Kino has repeatedly received awards from federal ministries and Hamburg's cultural authorities .

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. a b Blankenese cinema. In: Hamburg Film and Television Museum. Retrieved February 28, 2020 .
  2. Schauburg in Blankenese. In: Hamburg Film and Television Museum. Retrieved February 28, 2020 .
  3. Schauburg in Blankenese. In: Cinemas in the Blankenese district. Film and TV Museum Hamburg, accessed on February 28, 2020 .
  4. Hamburg Blankeneser Lichtspiele. In: Kikowiki. Retrieved February 28, 2020 .
  5. ^ Bernd Allenstein: Hamburg from Altona to Zollenspieker . Hoffmann and Campe, Hamburg 2002, ISBN 3-455-11333-8 , p. 218 .
  6. Matthias Elwards Kino is excellent. In: Abendblatt.de. September 25, 2002, accessed March 8, 2020 .
  7. Louisa Heyder: Blankeneser Kino and Elbe Filmtheater awarded. In: kloenschnack.de. September 2, 2016, accessed March 8, 2020 .
  8. Blankenese cinema: cinema in the villa - excellent! In: blankenese.de. Retrieved March 8, 2020 .

Coordinates: 53 ° 33 ′ 32.7 "  N , 9 ° 48 ′ 40.4"  E