List of cinemas in Berlin-French Buchholz

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The list of cinemas in Berlin-French Buchholz gives an overview of all cinemas that have existed in what is now the Berlin district of French Buchholz . The list was built according to information from research in the Kino-Wiki and linked to connections with Berlin's cinema history from further historical and current references. It reflects the status of the film screening facilities that have ever existed in Berlin as well as the situation in January 2020. According to this, there are 92 venues in Berlin, which means first place in Germany, followed by Munich (38), Hamburg (28), Dresden (18) as well as Cologne and Stuttgart (17 each). At the same time, this compilation is part of the lists of all Berlin cinemas .

Name / location address Duration description image
Buchholz Film Palace

( Location )

Pasewalker Strasse  67 1926-1972 The “Filmpalast Buchholz” cinema was built in 1926 in a former dance hall as a shop cinema with 250 seats in the corner building on the southwest corner of Pasewalker / Rosenthaler Straße. This intersection of Pasewalker / Berliner Strasse and Rosenthaler / Bahnhofstrasse on the southern edge of Buchholz was of importance for the municipality of Buchholz in the further settlement in the direction of the local connection between Rosenthal and Blankenburg with the road between Berlin under the Uckermark. In the cinema address book 1927/1928 (Verlag Max Mattisson), Eugen Scheuer is named as the owner of the Buchholz Film Palace. It was played three days a week. In 1930 a sound equipment followed, whereby the number of seats dropped to 150, but was given again in the following years as 248. In 1933 Otto Siebauer took over the venue, who introduced music equipment in 1934 and expanded it for sound film screenings. In 1937 the capacity was increased to 376 and the film screenings took place daily. The cinema is also registered for 1941 under this information. The cinema building survived the war and the film screenings continued. The cinema was still privately operated by T. Kewalewski in 1960. At the beginning of the 1960s, the Buchholz Film Palace was taken over by the VEB Berliner Filmtheater. After the venue was closed in March 1972, the previous use in the name of the HO restaurant as a "cinema room" was retained. At the rear of the property (20 m × 50 m) extensions had already been demolished. In the 2000s the building was empty and began to deteriorate. Around 2010 it was replaced by a four-storey new building in a “good residential area”.
Buchholz plays of light

( Location )

Berliner Strasse  39 1920-1928 The “Buchholzer Lichtspiele” was set up around 1920 in the Buchholz Society House (Berliner Straße 38/39) as a hall cinema with 190 seats. It was located on the south-east corner of Berliner Straße with Straße 53 (since 1994 Dr.-Markus-Straße ). For the cinema, the Lichtbildbühne (Reichs-Kino-Adressbuch edited according to official information) named 1911 as the opening year of the Sallkino. In 1920 Otto Müller from Berlin O 17 (Hohenlohestraße 4) and Paul Timm from Pankow (Kissingenstraße 57) are named. The 190 cinema seats were used twice a week, from 1921 to 1925 the day of the game is only Friday. In 1925 Th. Rettich took over and in 1927 Otto Müller again ran the 200-seat cinema with Paul Timm. In the same year, Th. Rettich expanded to 300 seats and played the films over the weekend from Friday to Monday. For the year 1928 the game days are again Friday and Sunday with 200 seats with Berthold Kaehne as owner of the demonstration facility. With the opening of the (full) cinema in the Filmpalast, which is only 350 meters away, the cinema in the Gesellschaftshaus ended. The building of the Buchholz Society House on the street corner mentioned has not been preserved; the area is used commercially.

literature

  • Astrid Bähr: Alhambra light plays . In: Sylvaine Hänsel, Angelika Schmitt (eds.): Cinema architecture in Berlin 1895–1995 . Berlin 1995.

Web links

The Kino Wiki is currently hosted on filmtheater.square7.ch . The data was compiled from the special address books Reichskino Adressbuch (Verlag Lichtbühne) and Kinoadressbuch (Verlag Max Mattisson) as well as the cinema list (1907–1910) of the first specialist journal for all of the art of photography, Der Kinematograph . The project of the Berlin cinemas is based on this data and supplements regional references.


Individual evidence

  1. Kino-Wiki main page, accessed on January 18, 2020. Kinowiki deals with the history of movie theaters in Germany and tries to collect all information about movie theaters and movie theaters in Germany. It is sorted according to federal states and cities. Everyone is called upon to supplement the data or correct errors.
  2. The breakdown by districts and districts is based on the district reform of 2001.
  3. ^ Stefan Strauss: Film? Running. Publication in the Berliner Zeitung , March 27, 2017, p. 13.
  4. ^ Corner of Rosenthaler Strasse: plan of Berlin. Sheet 4431 ( Memento of the original from November 16, 2016 in the Internet Archive ) Info: The archive link was inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. . X = 26915, Y = 29915 @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / www.histomapberlin.de
  5. ^ Chronicle of Buchholz
  6. Excerpt from the cinema directory for East Germany
  7. The weekly schedule was last published on March 3, 1972 in the Berliner Zeitung .
  8. ^ Corner of Dr.-Markus-Strasse plan of Berlin. Sheet 4431 ( Memento of the original from November 16, 2016 in the Internet Archive ) Info: The archive link was inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. . X = 26990, Y = 30266 @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / www.histomapberlin.de
  9. Lichtbildbühne 1920/21 edited as Reichs-Kino-Adressbuch according to official material. Third year 1920/1921, Lichtbild-Bühne publishing house.
  10. ^ Reichskino address book Volume 3 Distribution District I East Germany
  11. Postcard from the Gesellschaftshaus from 1928 while the cinema was in operation by barges , other postcards