Azrie Azizi
Photograph: Azrie Azizi
Photograph: Azrie Azizi

The best things to do in Bangkok this weekend (March 19-22)

Discover the best events, workshops, exhibitions and happenings in Bangkok over the next four days

Kaweewat Siwanartwong
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This week rolls in with its usual tricks – warm stretches broken up by the odd downpour that appears out of nowhere and vanishes just as fast. It barely stops anyone though. Plans carry on, maybe tweaked a bit, but still worth doing.

This weekend's shaping up as a nudge to get out and try something different. One Piece fans finally get their big moment with a massive pop-up landing at ICONSIAM, while film lovers can settle into Sala Saneha for screenings that feel intimate and unhurried. Over at Bangkok Planetarium, there's one last chance to visit before it closes for a while, and worth catching if you've not been in ages.

Mornings get a bit more interesting with The Matcha Run Club, where the chat matters more than how fast you're going. Come evening, Queer club HORN celebrates a year of late nights with a line-up that keeps things lively without overdoing it. The Have You Seen Documentary Film Festival shifts the mood entirely, creating proper space for real stories and honest conversations. Then there's Sake Playground down by the river, pulling together a lovely crowd for drinks, food and the kind of easy evening that stretches on longer than planned.

Rain or shine, the week moves forward. Don't spend it all indoors waiting for perfect weather. Bangkok's got far too much going on for that.

Get ahead of the game and start planning your month with our list of the top things to do this March.

Stay one step ahead and map out your plans with our round-up of the best things to do in Bangkok.


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What's on this weekend?

  • Things to do
  • Yaowarat

Skyline Film Bangkok waves goodbye to winter with a March programme that lingers on love in all its awkward, hopeful forms. Romantic dramas sit beside soft-centred rom-coms, the kind you quote years later without admitting it. The line-up reads like a well-thumbed diary: Past Lives, The Fault in Our Stars, The Perks of Being a Wallflower and Vicky Cristina Barcelona. Even The Hangover slips in. Thai favourite Seasons Change brings a rush of campus nostalgia, while How to Train Your Dragon and The Theory of Everything round things out. Swap the multiplex for open air, bring a friend and let the evening unfold gently.


March 19-21. B500 via here. River City Bangkok, 5.30pm and 8.30pm

  • Things to do
  • Charoennakhon

Call it a citywide fixation: One Piece takes over Bangkok with surprising ease. Fans who once followed Luffy on small screens now find those stories stretched across real space. Netflix brings a slice of the Grand Line to Lumpini Park, yet ICONSIAM answers with something more immersive: a 600-square-metre pop-up café that plays like a living archive. Scenes from past arcs reappear as walkable sets, while newly issued wanted posters chart the crew’s long evolution. A stamp trail links ten zones, gently guiding visitors across the space. At the centre, a five-metre Gear 5 Luffy looms with cartoonish confidence, slightly surreal, unmistakably designed for photographs and quiet disbelief.

Until 31 October. Free. ICONSIAM, 10am-8.30pm

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  • Things to do

Sala Saneha treats cinema and companionship as equal pleasures, and it shows in the way the place runs. Screenings begin exactly on time, no adverts and no trailers, just the film as intended. Doors open half an hour earlier, giving you space to arrive slowly, settle in and take stock of the room. The programme favours Thai classics, each paired with English subtitles, so even first-time viewers can follow every glance and pause. It feels considered rather than precious. Afterwards, conversation carries on over a wine list stretching past 2,000 bottles, generous without feeling showy. You come for a film, but you stay for the rhythm of the evening, unhurried and quietly indulgent.

March 19-23. Free. Sala Saneha. Check the schedule here.

  • Things to do
  • Khlong Toei

A last call feels overdue at Bangkok Planetarium, which prepares to close on March 30 for a long-awaited refresh. Since 1964, the domed theatre has quietly shaped how generations here imagine the sky, all reclining seats and soft narration. Monthly programmes rotate between educational reels and space-age fantasies, keeping each visit slightly different yet comfortingly familiar. That sense of nostalgia lingers, especially if you grew up visiting on school trips or slow weekends. The coming renovation promises change, though it also means a pause until late 2026. For now, the original setting remains intact, ready for one more visit. Go soon, take your time, and let the stars hold your attention before the lights dim.

Until March 30. B30-50 at the door. Bangkok Planetarium, 9am-4pm

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  • Things to do
  • Khlong Toei

After a globe-trotting 2025 run across Europe, North America and Australia, West London’s Central Cee sets his sights on Thailand with a debut solo show that feels long overdue. The rapper turns sharp observation and clipped delivery into an international calling card, with tracks like BAND4BAND, Sprinter, Obsessed With You and Let Go streaming from bedrooms in Shepherd’s Bush to Sukhumvit condos. He returns to Bangkok after Rolling Loud 2023, though this time the spotlight stays firmly on him. Expect full production, a headline set and that cool, self-assured presence that makes him one of the most sought-after touring names right now.


March 20. B2,500-5,500 via here. UOB LIVE, 6pm

  • Things to do
  • Surawong

Seven voices meet on the same wall, each shaped by different cities yet speaking through the same visual code. Artists from Thailand, France and Switzerland treat graffiti less as rebellion and more as a shared language, one that carries stories of ambition, missteps and quiet persistence. Styles shift from sharp lettering to loose, almost instinctive forms, but a sense of dialogue holds everything together. Youth lingers here, with all its uncertainty and small acts of bravery. Misjudgments sit beside moments of clarity, neither cancelling the other. What stays is the belief that expression matters, even when direction feels unclear, and that instinct often knows before certainty catches up.

March 20-May 3. Free. Maison JE Bangkok, 11am-7pm

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  • Things to do
  • Yaowarat

Darker Than Wax turns 15 and decides Bangkok is the right place to celebrate. The collective unites for DTW15, led by Dean Chew, Dexter Colt and Pam Anantr, with guests Isaac Aesili performing live and Ziggy Zeitgeist joining the bill. Expect DJ sets and live sessions that travel through soulful house, electronic textures and world grooves without feeling like a history lesson. They partner with Ritual Rhythm Weekend, founded in 2023 at Baan Trok Tua Ngork and later hosted at The Standard Bangkok. Crafts, food, design workshops and ambient performances round out a full-day gathering where music and movement share equal footing.


March 21. B300-500 via here. The Warehouse Talat Noi, 4pm onwards

  • Things to do
  • Rattanakosin

MOCANA began in New York in 2022 and now travels as a multi-disciplinary pop-up that treats culture as something lived rather than labelled. Built around five pillars, fine art, film, functional art, fashion and food, it gathers international and local names under one shifting roof. Exhibitions sit beside performances and workshops, each designed less for polite observation and more for participation. This edition frames culture as an archive you carry in your body. It lives in music, photographs, half-remembered conversations and objects kept for reasons you cannot quite explain. You listen, you move, you interact. Meaning forms through sound and shared experience, not wall text.
March 21. B1,111-1,666 via here. ASVIN, 2pm onwards

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  • Things to do

You know that moment when a performer holds a room and not a single word is spoken, yet you follow every beat? That is the quiet triumph of the Silent Theatre Festival. No subtitles, no linguistic gymnastics, just storytelling carried by movement, rhythm and the sort of physical comedy that leaves your ribs aching. House of Mask and Mime curates the programme, inviting artists from Japan, Czechia and Thailand who treat the body as both script and stage. Four productions feature this year, each with its own temperament, from tender absurdity to playful mischief. It feels refreshingly direct. You watch, you laugh, you feel slightly disarmed. Children sit beside adults, equally captivated, which perhaps says everything.


March 21-22. B490 via here. ​​Bangkok Art and Culture Centre (BACC), check timing here.

  • Things to do
  • Chula-Samyan

Morning plans feel lighter here, where showing up matters more than keeping pace. This easy-going gathering treats the run as optional, leaving space for conversation, small encounters and the kind of connections that form without effort. Matcha flows alongside music, while a DJ set keeps things gently moving rather than overwhelming. Games break the ice, strangers become familiar, and the mood stays refreshingly unforced. A lucky draw adds a playful edge, with prizes sourced from Chulalongkorn alumni labels like Simplify, YVIS, Maison KEEPS and Fat Crying Club. Tickets cover everything, from food and drinks to activities and a well-considered goodie bag. 

March 21. B350 via LINE: @goodcha.bkk. Slowcombo, 7.30am-midday

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  • Things to do
  • Events & Festivals

Since opening to the public last year, Sala Chaloem Thani has impressed everyone with strong programming, free showings and a cool old-school aesthetic.  This time round, the 107-year-old wooden cinema doubles down on that vintage feel, inviting classic film lovers to step back into the ‘70s with a weekend of movies that capture the teenage chaos of yesteryear.

Thai Film Director Association
Photograph: Thai Film Director Association

On Saturday March 21, screenings start local with Wai Onlawon (1976), a Bangkok love story about a provincial lad who bombs his university entrance exam and subsequently falls for his strict landlord's daughter. The film charmingly captures what teenage life looked like in the capital back then – messy romance, foolish outbursts and a good helping of youthful angst.

Sunday March 22 brings the international classic Grease (1978), a musical that needs no introduction. John Travolta and Olivia Newton-John star in this tale of chaotic high school romance set in the 50s.

Both screenings kick off at 4pm and entry is completely free. The caveat: tickets are only available at the door, giving none away before 3pm. And with only 200 seats, we recommend getting in line quickly. 

sawasdeeswing
Photograph: sawasdeeswing

Sunday also comes with a little more spectacle, as once Grease wraps up, the cinema floor opens for full-on swing dance party led by the Sawasdee Swing group. Dancing to the Grease megamix in a century-old wooden theatre? There’s a good reason Bangkok just made Time Out’s top 10 cities in the world list.

The cinema opens from 1pm, allowing you to wander the old building, take photos and be the first in the queue if you fancy. Just bring a fan because vintage charm doesn't usually include air conditioning.

  • Things to do
  • Silom

HORN turns one, and the night leans confidently forward rather than looking back. The club marks the moment with Adam Munnings, now based in Berlin, whose sets carry a decade of dance floors from Tokyo to New York and across Europe. Arrive early and the line-up unfolds with intent: 5.5MM opens with offbeat diva energy, before Inging and Maytae push things harder with precise, driving selections. Gaspray keeps the room alert, shifting through influences with ease, while Sriracha Czaddy raises the temperature with playful urgency. Mae Happyair closes in her own assured way, moving across genres without hesitation. The first 100 through the door leave with a small keepsake, though the real draw stays the music and the people it gathers together.

March 21. B300 before 7pm, B500 before 9pm and B700 before 11pm. HORN, 5pm onwards

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  • Things to do
  • Watthana

Documentary cinema in Thailand often sits at a distance, quietly labelled as something for specialists rather than casual viewers. The film festival gently challenges that idea. Created by four final-year students from Srinakharinwirot University, the project begins as a thesis and quickly turns outward, shaped by a desire to make real stories feel accessible again. The format stays refreshingly open: four carefully chosen films, followed by conversations with the filmmakers themselves. The experience feels closer to a gathering than a formal screening, where reality unfolds through different perspectives and proves just as compelling as fiction, if not more so.

March 21. Free. Reserve seats here. Cinema Oasis, 10am-8pm

  • Things to do
  • Watthana

Dating in Bangkok often feels hurried, all quick swipes and shorter conversations. Singles Listen, an OMG Matchmaking Gay Edition, offers a softer alternative set at Cielo Sky Bar & Restaurant, high above the city as evening light turns golden. The format stays simple: more than ten short conversations, each designed to feel easy rather than performative, with carefully selected guests who actually want to be present. A drink and small bite loosen the mood, while the skyline does most of the work. Matches continue beyond the table through the platform, then spill over into a relaxed mingle once the formalities end.

March 21. B1,499. Cielo Sky Bar & Restaurant, W District, 6pm-9pm

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  • Things to do
  • Chatuchak

This evening unfolds through food and sound, where dinner quietly meets performance. Chef Kob of Anakade prepares a three-course menu drawing from regional Thai cooking, each dish carrying its own sense of place without feeling heavy-handed. Between courses, Groovy Doopy rework Isan traditions through a jazz lens, joined by Sunny Rattana and Neung Nuengsaran, creating something familiar yet slightly unexpected. The rhythm of the night feels unforced, moving between flavours and melodies with ease. 

March 21. B3,000-5,000 via here. Sala Sudasiri Sobha, 6.30pm

  • Things to do
  • Yaowarat

Sake gets a fresh setting at Soul Songwat Sake Festival, where riverside views meet an easy, sociable crowd. More than 60 labels line the space, each offering a different take on Japan’s long-held brewing traditions, while visiting brewers and founders stay close by, ready for conversation rather than ceremony. DJs keep things moving, chefs and restaurants serve food that pairs without trying too hard, and guests drift between tastings at their own pace. A Play Mart corner adds another layer, stocked with limited bottles, glassware and small design-led finds worth taking home. Set against Songwat’s industrial edges, the festival frames sake not as something distant, but as a drink that fits comfortably within Bangkok’s shifting, contemporary rhythm.

March 21-22. B190-2,590 via here. Soul Songwat, midday-midnight.

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  • Indian
  • Phaya Thai

The Indian restaurant Nila moves forward with a second chapter that feels wider, yet still grounded in memory and ritual. The menu now travels across India, gathering regional favourites and quieter dishes that rarely leave home kitchens, each chosen for meaning rather than novelty. Plates like peri peri jheenga, mochar chop and anjeer kofta arrive with a sense of place, shaped by how they are cooked and why they endure. The bar sits alongside the kitchen, not apart from it, so drinks and food speak to each other throughout the night.

Reserve via 02-653-9000. Nila, Amari Bangkok, midday-midnight.

  • Things to do
  • Asok

For those who just can’t say no to a coffee, then take a walk down Coffee Road as it returns to Terminal 21 Asok. Office workers stop by after long afternoons while casual wanderers arrive for a slower midday break, all united by the promise of a decent cup. Baristas line the space with stalls serving everything from careful pour-overs to bold iced blends, each offering a slightly different idea of what constitutes a perfect brew. A bassy DJ booth keeps the atmosphere lively, turning the gathering into an easy going coffee party where music and caffeine share equal importance. Stroll through the venue with cup in hand, chatting with friends or discovering unfamiliar roasts along the way. Be warned, however, you only have two hours to see it all.

March 13-22. Free. Terminal 21 Asok. Midday-2pm

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  • Things to do
  • Rattanakosin

Takuya Mitani paints girls who look as if they step from a dream you almost remember. Rooted in Pop Surrealism and Symbolism, his exhibition studies the thin line between purity and the stranger instincts we prefer to dress up politely. Six canvases present young figures adorned with ram horns, crocodile tails and carefully constructed wings. These details read less as fantasy than armour, protective gear for souls that feel both tender and feral. Each composition balances sweetness with unease, decorative calm brushing against something watchful beneath the surface. Mitani suggests myth never disappears; it adapts, shifts shape and lingers in modern life. The work asks you to look twice, then reconsider what innocence really protects.

February 22-March 22. Free. Joyman Gallery, 11am-6pm

  • Things to do
  • Asok

February Sundays gain a leisurely rhythm with Sunday Jazzy Brunch, a month-long series pairing thoughtful cooking with live jazz that gently reshapes the usual weekend routine. Each week introduces a new culinary theme, encouraging returning guests to experience familiar surroundings through fresh flavours and seasonal ingredients handled with quiet confidence. Expect towers of chilled seafood, flame kissed specialities and shareable plates designed for lingering conversation rather than hurried bites. Atmosphere leans warm and unpretentious, allowing romance to appear naturally without staged theatrics. The Namsai Trio provide an elegant soundtrack, their intimate arrangements drifting through the room like a soft afternoon breeze. Friends gather around generous tables, couples settle close over sparkling glasses, solo visitors find easy comfort among strangers united by music, laughter and the unspoken joy of slowing down.

Every Sunday. Starts at B1,500. Reserve via 02-649-8888. Sheraton Grande Sukhumvit, midday-3pm

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  • Things to do
  • Siam

Envelopes arrive like quiet travellers, each carrying a fragment of someone else’s world. This exhibition gathers printmakers from across continents under the tender premise of ‘Mail Art’, where works pass hand to hand before settling side by side on a single wall. Every sheet holds a journey, a memory, a stamp that hints at distance crossed. Printmaking, after all, resists the lazy label of reproduction. It sits somewhere between laboratory and studio, balancing chemistry with instinct. Woodcut, etching, lithography and screen printing share space with newer experiments, each surface revealing social tensions, cultural codes and private fixations. Lines bite, ink lingers, paper breathes. On Saturdays March 7, March 14, March 21 and March 28 from 1pm-3pm, artists demonstrate their craft and welcome walk-ins to make a piece of their own.


March 3-29. Free. Pre-register here. Gallery B1 Room, Bangkok Art and Culture Centre, 10am-10pm

  • Things to do
  • Thonglor

March arrives and Funky Lam marks it in the most Lao manner possible: with heat, herbs and a generous hand. From Tuesday March 3, every woman who walks through the door receives tam mak hoong on the house, all month. Consider it less a promotion, more a gesture. This is papaya salad as Luang Prabang makes it. The fruit is shaved into ribbons rather than hacked into chunks, then worked patiently in a clay mortar until the dressing seeps through every strand. Padaek brings its deep, funky bass note, anchoring lime, chilli and tomato with unapologetic strength. The result tastes bold, savoury and fiercely itself. 

Until March 31. Free. Funky Lam, 6pm-midnight

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  • Things to do
  • Phloen Chit

A taste of Tottori lands in Bangkok as Tsu Japanese Restaurant at JW Marriott Hotel Bangkok presents a seasonal showcase that runs ‘til April. The focus rests on a prefecture shaped by wind, water and restraint. Tottori Prefecture stretches along the Sea of Japan, framed by Mount Daisen and its storied slopes, and long ribbons of sand edging the coast. Landscape informs flavour; clarity matters. Chef Atsushi Yoshida builds a menu around regional produce. Nebarikko Age-dashi celebrates the area’s prized yam, crisp shell giving way to softness. Zuwai snow crab meets ikura in clay pot rice, sweet flesh balanced by saline pop. A5 Tottori Wagyu Olein 55 striploin offers generous marbling, while gyokotsu ramen simmers slowly before Oushu pear sorbet closes on a clean note.

Until April 30. Starts at B280. Tsu Japanese Restaurant, JW Marriott Hotel Bangkok, 11.30pm-10pm

  • Things to do
  • Sathorn

Anastasia Maslova and Damian Black map the uneasy terrain of human attachment, tracing bonds that bruise even as they brighten. Their exhibition studies intimacy as structure: fragile, ferocious, occasionally splintered. Affection leaves marks, yet those same marks seed renewal. Visitors move through a multisensory setting where photographs hang beside paintings, sculptures share space with wearable pieces and interactive objects ask for touch rather than distance. Candles release a signature scent developed with Crystals and Herbs, adding another quiet layer to the experience. Nothing feels decorative; each work circles the paradox of connection, at once tender and unnerving, destructive and generative. You wander, pause, reconsider your own history of closeness, and perhaps recognise that vulnerability often carries its own strange beauty.

March 7-27. Free. Sathorn 11 Art Space, 5pm-2am

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  • Things to do
  • Yaowarat

In her latest solo exhibition, Phatnaree Boonmee turns her attention to the values society treats as immovable. Status, power, race – ideas passed down so routinely they begin to feel natural – quietly script behaviour and set the terms of belonging. The contemporary world congratulates itself on inclusivity, yet difference still becomes a pretext for judgement and control, breeding suspicion and private anxiety. A graduate of Silpakorn University in Visual Arts, Phatnaree works with colour and spatial ambiguity to create a low hum of unease. Her canvases avoid ghosts and folklore; instead they trace the architecture of pressure that encourages silence and compliance. Viewers stand before fields of atmosphere that feel almost breathable, sensing how invisible hierarchies shape everyday life.

Until March 28. Free. This Is Unlimited, 2pm-6pm

  • Things to do
  • Siam

Bangkok welcomes 2026 with a knowing wink as Muse Anime Festival sets up at JAM SPACE, a familiar meeting point for pop culture devotees. This is less trade fair, more shared obsession. Fourteen anime titles spread across 17 photo zones turn fandom into a walk-through experience, complete with oversized sets and scenes designed for lingering rather than rushing. Expect towering inflatables of Momo and Okarun from DAN DA DAN plus Rimuru, the eternally cheerful slime, looming large for cameras. Beyond the visuals, shelves fill with officially licensed pieces and harder-to-find imports, tempting even the disciplined collector. Food gets its own moment too, thanks to a themed cafe riffing on SPY x FAMILY and That Time I Got Reincarnated as a Slime

January 10-March 29. Free. 4/F, MBK Centre, 11am-9pm

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  • Things to do
  • Nong Khaem

STILL House stands quietly among the glass towers of Asoke, a restored heritage home that favours memory over gloss. Its latest chapter exhibition unfolds through a collaboration between NORSE Republics and &Tradition, a name long associated with Danish craft and considered modernism. Rooms shift from domestic familiarity to thoughtful installation. Chairs, lamps and objects sit not as showroom pieces but as prompts for touch and contemplation. Soft scent lingers, sound hums gently, small tastings appear during workshops that encourage slowing down. The exhibition frames design as lived experience rather than static display, offering a brief retreat from the city’s insistence on speed without losing sight of its context.

Until April 15. Free. STILL House, 10am-7pm

  • Things to do
  • Asok

An exhibition confronting Thai democracy arrives with unsettling clarity, pairing Manit Sriwanichpoom and Akkara Naktamna in a conversation that feels both personal and painfully public. Their works sketch daily existence beneath rigid political scripts where citizenship becomes an endurance test rather than an act of participation. Photographs and installations lean on sharp metaphors: veiled faces, constricted bodies, environments that appear breathable yet quietly hostile. Each piece questions authority’s gentle language while revealing how control slips through education, media, ritual. Viewers are left wondering what belief even means when vision feels filtered and breath negotiated. Are citizens misled, or simply surviving within limits imposed long before consent? The exhibition asks uncomfortable questions without promising answers, suggesting delusion may not belong to individuals alone but to a system sustained by repetition, fear and uneasy silence.

Until April 12. Free. West Eden Gallery, 11am-6pm

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  • Things to do

Bangkok does not always demand skyscraper gazing. Sometimes it hands you a pocket-sized booklet and suggests a long walk. The BAC Passport returns with its Winter Edition 2026, turning the city into a living sketchbook where each stamp is an achievement. You pick up the passport, roam between art spaces, collect marks and trade them for souvenirs created by actual artists. It plays out like a cultural scavenger hunt, only with better stories to tell afterwards. This season gathers 27 destinations and splits them across four routes, from Old Town corners to riverbank hideouts. Pick up your passport at one of seven locations, including Ratchadamnoen Contemporary Art Center, Bangkok City Library, Chula Museum, River City Bangkok, Princess Galyani Vadhana Institute of Music, Asvin or Numthong Art Space. You have until May 31 to complete the journey.

 Until May 31. Free. Art spaces across Bangkok.

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