The long holiday finally winds down, and the first bursts of rain make Bangkok feel slightly more breathable. Evenings open up just enough to justify staying out, which works out well because the city’s packed the weekend with art, music, screenings and a few stranger detours worth building a night around.
Start riverside at Asiatique The Riverfront Destination, where Better World Better Future turns climate anxiety into something unexpectedly immersive through multisensory tech and a genuinely disorienting 9D cinema. In Ari, Bar Lookkrung Ari leans fully into luk krung nostalgia with satin-smooth classics and fruit-led cocktails, while Bangkok Kunsthalle hosts the final Disco Hut residency with Spencer Sweeney and Tawan Wattuya spinning Thai funk and deep-cut selections pulled from personal crates.
Later in the evening, Chula Museum shifts into night-market mode with student-made finds and a one-night Sea-nema screening focused on ocean change, while film fans can catch Sakar Pant’s Hijo Aja Ka Kura at TK Park as part of the Contemporary World Film Series.LHONG 1919 rolls out free outdoor screenings under glowing lanterns across three nights.
And then there's the big one: Kraftwerk arrive in Bangkok with their Multimedia Tour, where visuals, sequencing and machine-precise sound design lock together so tightly it barely feels human. In the best possible way.
Map out the rest of the month with our guide to what’s on, and keep an eye on our picks of Bangkok’s best things to do.
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