Skip to main content

Hauptmenü (NEU)

  • Visit
    • Program
    • Plan your visit
    • Families
    • Groups
    • Schools
  • Online
    • Streaming
    • Digital collection
    • 360° exhibitions
  • Research
    • Archives
    • Film distribution
    • Library
  • Kinemathek
    • About us
    • E-Werk
    • History
    • Publications
    • Jobs
    • Press

Bottom menu

  • Contact
  • Become a supporter

Follow us on:

  • Facebook
  • YouTube
  • Instagram

Top menu

  • Deutsch
  • English
  • Plain language
  • Sign language

Breadcrumb

  1. Gallery
  2. From 1990: Reunified Germany

From 1990: Reunified Germany

Back

    • Zoo-Palast, Hardenbergstraße 29 a–e (Berlin-Charlottenburg), 1990
      Photo: Volker Noth, source: Deutsche Kinemathek

    • Astor, Kurfürstendamm 217 (Berlin-Charlottenburg), 1990
      Photo: Volker Noth, source: Deutsche Kinemathek

    • Forum, Parisiusstraße 12–14 (Berlin-Köpenick), 1994
      Photo: Volker Noth, source: Deutsche Kinemathek

    • fsk, Wiener Straße 20 (Berlin-Kreuzberg), 1994
      Photo: Volker Noth, source: Deutsche Kinemathek

    • Intimes, Boxhagener Straße 107 (Berlin-Friedrichshain), 1994. The Intimes is a typical Berlin “Ladenkino” (small, local cinema) that has been in operation for nearly a century.
      Photo: Volker Noth, source: Deutsche Kinemathek

    • Provinz-Kino, Provinzstraße 30 (Berlin-Reinickendorf), 1995
      Photo: Volker Noth, source: Deutsche Kinemathek

    • Arsenal, Welserstraße 25 (Berlin-Schöneberg), 1995
      Photo: Volker Noth, source: Deutsche Kinemathek

    • Bundesplatz-Kino, Bundesplatz 14 (Berlin-Wilmersdorf), 1995
      Photo: Volker Noth, source: Deutsche Kinemathek

    • Eiszeit, Zeughofstraße 20 (Berlin-Kreuzberg), 1995. The Eiszeit movie theater got its start in 1981 when it regularly screened Super 8 films at a building squat in Berlin-Schöneberg. It moved to Kreuzberg in the mid-1980s.
      Photo: Volker Noth, source: Deutsche Kinemathek

    • Filmtheater am Friedrichshain, Bötzowstraße 1–5 (Berlin-Friedrichshain), 1995
      Photo: Volker Noth, source: Deutsche Kinemathek

    • Gloria-Palast, Kurfürstendamm 12–13 (Berlin-Charlottenburg), 1995
      Photo: Volker Noth, source: Deutsche Kinemathek

    • Blauer Stern, Hermann-Hesse-Straße 11 (Berlin-Pankow), 1996
      Photo: Volker Noth, source: Deutsche Kinemathek

    • Central-Kino, Rosenthaler Straße 39 (Berlin-Mitte), 1996
      Photo: Volker Noth, source: Deutsche Kinemathek

    • Kino International, Karl-Marx-Allee 33 (Berlin-Friedrichshain), 1996
      Photo: Volker Noth, source: Deutsche Kinemathek

    • Colosseum, Schönhauser Allee 123 (Berlin-Prenzlauer Berg), 1995
      Photo: Volker Noth, source: Deutsche Kinemathek

    • Colosseum, Schönhauser Allee 123 (Berlin-Prenzlauer Berg), 1998
      Photo: Volker Noth, source: Deutsche Kinemathek

    • Eva-Lichtspiele, Blissestraße 18 (Berlin-Wilmersdorf), 1999. This cinema, which opened under the name Roland Lichtspiele in 1912, is the oldest movie theater in Wilmersdorf.
      Photo: Volker Noth, source: Deutsche Kinemathek

    • Xenon, Kolonnenstraße 5–6 (Berlin-Schöneberg), 1999. Director Jörg Buttgereit (seated in front of the movie theater) worked here as a film presenter for many years.
      Photo: Volker Noth, source: Deutsche Kinemathek

    • CineStar Event Cinema (IMAX), Potsdamer Platz (Sony Center), 1999
      Photo: Volker Noth, source: Deutsche Kinemathek

    • Delphi, Kantstraße 12a (Berlin-Charlottenburg), 2000
      Photo: Volker Noth, source: Deutsche Kinemathek

    • Brotfabrik, Caligariplatz 1 (Berlin-Weißensee), 2002. Using the space of a bakery/bread factory founded in 1914, a youth club was established in 1986 and a movie theater ‒ now considered the first East Berlin arthouse cinema ‒ was added in 1990.
      Photo: Volker Noth, source: Deutsche Kinemathek

    • Alhambra, Seestraße 94 (Berlin-Wedding), 1999. That same year the building was torn down to make way for construction of a modern, multiplex movie theater.
      Photo: Volker Noth, source: Deutsche Kinemathek

    • Alhambra, Seestraße 94 (Berlin-Wedding), 2002. After its redesign into a multiplex movie theater, the Alhambra had seven auditoriums.
      Photo: Volker Noth, source: Deutsche Kinemathek

    • Babylon, Rosa-Luxemburg-Straße 30 (Berlin-Mitte), 2002
      Photo: Volker Noth, source: Deutsche Kinemathek

    • Filmkunst 66, Bleibtreustraße 12 (Berlin-Charlottenburg), 2002
      Photo: Volker Noth, source: Deutsche Kinemathek

    • Cinema Paris, Kurfürstendamm 211 (Berlin-Charlottenburg), 2002
      Photo: Volker Noth, source: Deutsche Kinemathek

    • Regenbogenkino, Lausitzer Straße 202 (Berlin-Kreuzberg), 2002. In the wake of a squat of a small chemical plant, the movie theater emerged in 1981 in a back courtyard in Kreuzberg.
      Photo: Volker Noth, source: Deutsche Kinemathek

    • Moviemento, Kottbusser Damm 22 (Berlin-Kreuzberg), 2002
      Photo: Volker Noth, source: Deutsche Kinemathek

    • Tilsiter Lichtspiele, Richard-Sorge-Straße 25a (Berlin-Friedrichshain), 2003
      Photo: Volker Noth, source: Deutsche Kinemathek

    • Capitol, Dörpfeldstraße 29 (Berlin-Adlershof), 2003. This movie theater closed in 1990 following Reunification.
      Photo: Volker Noth, source: Deutsche Kinemathek

    • Turm-Palast, Turmstraße 25/26 (Berlin-Moabit). The Turm-Palast (formerly the Ufa-Theater Turmstraße) closed in the mid-1970s, although the lettering of its name survived for decades.
      Photo: Volker Noth, source: Deutsche Kinemathek

Share via:

  • E-mail
  • Print/PDF

Newsletter

Missed out on yet another event? Sign up now for our newsletter and news from the Deutsche Kinemathek will be sent once a month directly to your inbox.

Contact

  • Accessibility
  • Contacts
  • Getting to the Museum

Programs

  • Education
  • Families
  • Schools
  • Academics

Services

  • Film distribution
  • Press
  • Rentals

Follow us

Follow us on:

  • Facebook
  • YouTube
  • Instagram
  • Deutsch
  • English
  • Federal act to protect cultural property
  • Fee schedule
  • Imprint
  • Data privacy
  • Cookie settings
Back to Top
Funded by: 
Stiftung Deutsche Kinemathek Berlin © 2025