Greatest cinemas
Photograph: Time Out
Photograph: Time Out

The 100 greatest cinemas in the world right now

Classic kinos, cult film temples and fabulous picture palaces from across the planet

Phil de Semlyen
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There’s never been a better – or more important – time to celebrate cinemas. They’re the places we go to dream, focal points of our communities, and an all-round great escape. Yet movie theatres are faced with challenges that even lovelty popcorn holders can’t help with.

But they’ve survived the advent of TV, Hollywood strikes, a couple of pandemics, and so far, they’re holding firm against streaming and surging costs – and there’s reasons for optimism, too: younger, Letterboxd-savvy audiences are embracing the big-screen experience like never before, and filmmakers like Ryan Coogler, Christopher Nolan and Chloé Zhao are championing it at every opportunity. Just try booking an IMAX ticket for The Odyssey.

With that in mind, Time Out’s local experts have collaborated on a celebration of the best cinemas from across the globe. From cult Tokyo cinemas and grand Parisian film temples to beloved Sydney picturehouses and LA film dream palaces, from a Berlin kino with its own nuclear bunker to a Canadian cinema with only 12 seats, we’ve pointed the spotlight on a hundred magnificent movie palaces that all movie lovers should know about – and visit. 

NB We’ve gone almost entirely with single-use cinemas rather than venues that double up as theatres or gig venues. 

Greatest cinemas

100. The Park Theatre, Manitoba

Built in 1936 inside a National Park by meticulous craftsmen, this saddle-notched log cinema is unforgettable thanks to exposed beams, rafters and fieldstone. Perched on the edge of Clear Lake, Manitoba, it’s the largest log cabin theatre in North America spanning over 3,000 square feet and seating up to 500 guests. Go for the Hollywood blockbusters, stay for a slice of the apple berry cobbler. 

How to support The Park Theatre: Created to create jobs during the Depression, buying tickets, concessions, and engaging with its social media is the best way to support this family-run operation.

Laura Osborne
Laura Osborne
Editor, Time Out Canada

99. Aribau Cinema, Barcelona

With a capacity of over 1,100 people, Aribau is the antidote to tiny, solitary screens. The largest in Barcelona, it’s a celebration of moviegoing as a collective experience. Today, it's a cornerstone for festivals: the opening night of the In-Edit film fest is a red-letter date on the city's cultural calendar. Premieres and classics are given a new lease on life on the state-of-the-art projectors, while the original décor is a beautiful reminder of cinema’s golden age.

How to support Aribau Cinema: Pop along on a Wednesday where it’s €6 tickets for most movies all day.

María José Gómez
María José Gómez
Directora, Time Out Barcelona
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98. The Kinema in the Woods, Lincoln

A quaint former cricket pavilion nestled among the rustling oak, pine, beech and birch trees in the grounds of a long-gone hotel, the Kinema employs back projection due to the low trusses of its scout hut-style roof and houses the last remaining oriental-style Compton organ. It’s rammed with memorabilia – including a Dalek in the lobby – and now offers outdoor screenings in the Woodland Courtyard. 

How to support the Kinema: Can’t get there in person? Buy a book about the cinema, a CD of the in-house organ music or a DVD documentary of the place online.

Jane Crowther
Jane Crowther
Film journalist, author and broadcaster

97. Shankweiler’s drive-in, Pennsylvania

In the 1950s there were over 4,000 drive-in theatres across the States; now only 300 originals survive. This Pennsylvania stalwart is the country’s oldest, still serving up a flickering screen and funnel cakes as hotelier Wilson Shankweiler did when he first threw open its red neon gates in 1934. The tech has improved since then with crisp projection, and in-car sound via a radio tune-in. Jump leads are also available at the snack bar. 

How to support Shankweiler’s: The drive-in offers farmer’s markets and fairs in daylight hours so you can make a day (and night) of it.

Jane Crowther
Jane Crowther
Film journalist, author and broadcaster
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96. Sun Pictures, Broome

Luxuriating in the heat haze of Broome, Western Australia, the open-air garden cinema is one of the remotest in the world. Founded in 1916 by Japanese entrepreneurs (and movie lovers), the Yamasaki family, it wasn’t uncommon for screenings to be flooded by fish-filled waves until a levee was erected in the ’70s. In 2009, the stars of Aussie musical Bran Nue Dae walked the red dirt ‘carpet’ outside. 

How to support Sun Pictures: Show your ongoing support by purchasing their Movie Money Book deal, offering ten tickets at a discounted price.

Stephen A Russell
Stephen A Russell
Contributor

95. Cromarty Community Cinema, Scotland

Tired of a 50-mile round trip to the cinema in Inverness and watching films in borrowed buildings locally, a local film society decided to build a bespoke 35-seater movie house on this blustery tip of the Black Isle in Scotland. With the help of crowdsourcing and grants, it opened in 2020 and remains volunteer-run. The shipping container-inspired cinema is cosy and well attended, with an annual film festival that attracts supportive stars.

How to support the Comarty Community Cinema: Membership offers entire cinema hire, early-bird access to Cromarty Film Festival tickets and a discount on regular tickets. 

Jane Crowther
Jane Crowther
Film journalist, author and broadcaster
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94. The Bellevue Theatre, New Jersey

You don’t need to be an old-timer to be glad to see this suburban cinema restored to its former glories, because the historic Bellevue is evocative enough to transport you back in 1922 on its own. Montclair Film, which hosts a film festival here, has done the hard graft of reviving it original architectural details, including the wooden and plaster façades, and modernise its three screens with state-of-the-art projection and sound systems. It’s a truly special local cinema. 

How to support The Bellevue: Chip in at Montclair Film’s donations page and help support this thriving creative community.

Delia Barth
Delia Barth
Global Head of Video

93. Cinema dei Piccolo, Rome

Who needs the Colosseum? Initially a movie house for bambinos inspired by its founder’s love of Mickey Mouse, this mini-cine in Rome’s Villa Borghese gardens is now a Roman institution. At just seven metres square, it’s also officially the smallest cinema in the world according to Guinness World Records. Restored and modernised with a 4K digital projection upgrade, the Piccolo has a lively programme of cinema and activities within the sun-dappled park. 

How to support Cinema dei Piccolo: Take your bambini to watch an animation – as the founder intended.

Jane Crowther
Jane Crowther
Film journalist, author and broadcaster
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92. The Byrd Theatre, Virginia

A grand picture palace opened in 1928, the Bryd has stayed a movie house for over a century, its opulent French-style 1,200 seat auditorium lit with an 18-foot-tall, 2.5-ton chandelier of over 5,000 Czechoslovakian crystals and 500 bulbs – resisting redevelopment where many others fell. Designated a National Historic Landmark in 1980, the Byrd still deploys its mighty Wurlitzer organ before each show. 

How to support the Byrd Theatre: Get along to the annual The Big LeBYRDski festival or join the Movie Lovers’ Club for $10/month.

Jane Crowther
Jane Crowther
Film journalist, author and broadcaster
  • Cinemas
  • Independent
  • Holborn

It might have only opened last year, but The Nickel has fast become a one-stop shop for London’s most deranged cinephiles. Showing only the trashiest and sleaziest of B-movies, retro erotic thrillers, and cult films by auteurs such as Cassavetes and Jodorowsky, you can find this 37-seater grindhouse appropriately sandwiched between a strip pub and magic shop. The ideal date-night spot for the beloved pervert in your life. 

How to support The Nickel: Become a member for £25 a year, which gives you a free ticket, £2 off every ticket, and a bar discount.

Leonie Cooper
Leonie Cooper
Food & Drink Editor, London
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90. Cinema Jack & Betty, Yokohama

Yokohama is often dubbed ‘movie town’. Kurosawa’s High and Low was set here, while the street on which Cinema Jack & Betty is located was once surrounded by picturehouses like the Yokohama Nichigeki, made famous in the ‘90s ‘Maiku Hama’ film trilogy. When the single-screen Yokohama Meiga-za was split into two rooms in 1991 – one showing samurai films, the other romances – it was rechristened ‘Jack & Betty’ using names from an English textbook. Today, this classic mini-theatre champions new indie talents – Drive My Car Oscar-winner Ryusuke Hamaguchi was championed here as early as 2010. 

How to support Jack & Betty: buy a Member’s Club card, which offers nationwide mini-theatre discounts and even a free ticket on the month of your birthday 

James Balmont
James Balmont
Freelance arts and culture journalist

89. Cine Kamari, Santorini

Santorini is one of Greece’s most popular islands, and Cine Kamari definitely adds to its charm. Operating since 1987, this open-air cinema has been offering locals and visitors memorable nights under the stars for decades. Located in Kamari, on the island’s quieter side, it sits within a lush tropical garden and is open from May to October. Alongside classic cinema snacks and refreshments, guests can also enjoy local beers or cocktails. Since 2018, Cine Kamari has hosted Santorini Film Festival, screening shorts, feature films, and documentaries across a wide range of genres. Tickets cost €10. 

How to support the Cine Kamari: Attend the annual Santorini Film Festival, held at the open-air cinema each summer. 

Demetrios Ioannou
Demetrios Ioannou
Contributor, Greece
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88. Atlas 1948, Istanbul

Located on Istanbul’s famous İstiklal Avenue in a 19th-century building, Atlas offers a grand, single-auditorium experience – as well as a home to the Istanbul Film Festival. Recent restorations have carefully preserved the venue’s unique atmosphere and converted adjacent spaces into the cinephile-friendly Istanbul Cinema Museum. In a city where cinemas are increasingly confined to shopping malls, Atlas stands as a powerful reminder of cinema’s place in the public realm – embedded in the street, open to the city, and central to Istanbul’s cultural life.

How to support Atlas 1948: Pop in for a movie and a tour of the Cinema Museum.

Seda Pekçelen
Seda Pekçelen
Managing Editor, Istanbul

87. The Roxy, Wellington

Situated in ‘Wellywood’, this rejuvenated art deco delight is next door to Weta Film Studios and has links with the biggest film franchise to come out of New Zealand. Oscar-winning editor of The Lord of the Rings Jamie Selkirk and wife Ann along with Weta Workshop founder Tania Rodger renovated this space in 2011 using Weta artists to fashion the unique interior (otherworldly ceiling murals, Gandalph and Gollum statues, artisan door handles). As cinemas go, this one is preciousss. 

How to support the Roxy: The cracking in-house restaurant, CoCo, offers regular ‘Eat the Film’ nights to watch, drool and then scoff themed treats. 

Jane Crowther
Jane Crowther
Film journalist, author and broadcaster
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86. Bíó Paradís, Reykjavík

Bío Paradis, Reykjavik

If ‘the lonely cinema at the edge of the world’ sounds like a dream spot for introverted film lovers to head, you won’t be disappointed by this nonprofit Reykjavík three-screener a couple of blocks from the sea. Iceland’s only arthouse cinema – in fairness, there are only a dozen or so cinemas – is dedicated to showcasing local filmmakers, as well as foreign films, docs and shorts. And they do loads more than that here. Grab a seat in the cosy café/bar or movie poster-lined lounge and someone will tell you all about it.

How to support Bío Paradis: Become a friend of the cinema to help its fundraising efforts. 

Phil de Semlyen
Phil de Semlyen
Global film editor

85. The Rustic Theatre, California

A hamlet nestling among pine trees of the San Jacinto Mountains in Riverside County, Idyllwild is a quirky, artsy community; Ansel Adams taught photography at the Arts Summer Programme, Frank Gehry built his first house here, Elvis filmed Kid Gallahad on location and there are as many art galleries as hiking trails. The wood cabin Rustic has been a regular fixture since 1952 in a town that has movie stars as neighbours as well as onscreen. 

How to support the Rustic: Head to the annual film fest, described by the Hollywood Reporter as ‘the greatest little film festival on earth’. Bring hiking boots.

Jane Crowther
Jane Crowther
Film journalist, author and broadcaster
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84. Cines Embajadores, Madrid

Converting a bank into a cinema feels like a revolutionary act these days. But if, just three years later, you open another one with three more screens, the feat becomes heroic. Our hero has a name: Miguel Ángel Pérez, who, a few months after the pandemic, dared to open this indie neighbourhood cinema where you can enjoy the best Spanish films, the latest releases – both in their original version and dubbed. A perfect balance to attract all kinds of audiences and keep the big screen alive in the heart of the city.

How to support Cines Embajadores: Sign up on
their website and become part of their community.

Marta Bac
Marta Bac
Directora editorial, Time Out Madrid

83. The Castle Cinema, Hackney

When The Castle first opened in 1913 the moving picture was still a novelty. Although we’re a lot more used to the concept today, this cinema has retained that pure, unadulterated ardour for the medium. In fact, it only exists today as a film theatre because the local community crowdfunded enough cash to return the long-since converted space back to former glories in 2016. If that legacy somehow isn’t enough to tempt you, maybe the luxurious armchairs or art deco bar can. 

How to support The Castle: Become a member – packages range from £17.50 to £245.

Annie McNamee
Annie McNamee
Contributor, Time Out London and UK
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82. Delite Cinema, Delhi

One of Delhi’s last surviving single-screens, setting foot in this cultural institution feels like stepping into a mini-palace, complete with ornate interiors, wooden staircases, and hanging chandeliers. The cinema expanded in 2008 to add an additional screen called Delite Diamond, which hosts less mainstream fare. The second screen might be recent, but it still adds to Delite’s old-world charm, boasting brocade-fabric seats and an intricately hand-painted dome. 

How to support Delite Cinema: The crowded snacks counter offers not just popcorn and soda but classic street snacks like chuski (ice popsicle) and the ‘Maha Samosa’, reputed as Delhi’s largest samosa.

Shaurya Thapa
Shaurya Thapa
Film writer

81. Cinema São Jorge, Lisbon

Where else in Lisbon can you see figures like Francis Ford Coppola, Pedro Almodóvar or Wagner Moura in person, while also discovering the filmmakers of tomorrow? With its iconic neon sign lighting up Avenida da Liberdade since 1950, Cinema São Jorge remains one of the city’s landmarks. It hosts festivals such as IndieLisboa, DocLisboa and Queer Lisboa, while also screening classics like The Godfather. Arrive early, grab a drink at the bar and enjoy the magic of the big screen across its three theatres.

How to support Cinema São Jorge: Take a virtual tour or sign up for the newsletter.

Hugo Geada
Hugo Geada
Jornalista
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80. The Little Prince Cinema, Ontario

This Guinness World Record–holding cinema in Stratford, Canada, is officially the smallest purpose-built cinema in operation – barely bigger than the average bedroom. The 12-seat spot channels Victorian and Roaring Twenties design, and screens short films during the day free of charge (and feature length pictures in the evenings). And yes, there’s popcorn – and cotton candy, too. 

How to support The Little Prince CinemaBecome a member to support this social enterprise cinema.

Laura Osborne
Laura Osborne
Editor, Time Out Canada
  • Cinemas
  • Independent
  • Peckham
  • Recommended

A converted supermarket, this vibrant indie multiplex in south east London has become a cultural touchstone for the loyal local community since opening in 1994, and keeps its prices highly affordable. Host of the Peckham and Nunhead Free Film Festival, the Young Filmmakers Competition, the Peckham Festival graduation ceremonies for neighborhood schools, the pink-interiored Peckhamplex was enshrined in cinema as the perfect date spot in Rye Lane

How to support Peckhamplex: Buy a gift voucher for a mate. They start as low as £5, echoing the ticket price ethos of cinema for everyone. 

Jane Crowther
Jane Crowther
Film journalist, author and broadcaster
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78. Le Colisée, Carcassonne

With its all-white stucco Art Nouveau style inspired by the Vichy opera house, stepping inside feels like you’re off to a ball with Empress Sissi – or walking straight into the inside of a giant wedding cake. Opened in 1921 as the theatre of the Grand Hôtel Terminus, the Colisée or ‘Colosseum’ became a cinema in 1932 and is now considered one of the most beautiful screening rooms in Europe.

How to support Le Colisée: Join the CGR Club to support the operator and get discounted tickets.

Antoine Besse
Antoine Besse
Responsable des rubriques restaurants et bars

77. Cameo Picturehouse, Edinburgh

Walking into the Cameo Picturehouse is like wandering into the past. Not just because of the old forgotten gems that are often playing, although that’s certainly a plus, but also because of the listed interior of the more than 100-year old building, which includes original Edwardian tiles, pillars, and bar. You’d never guess the splendor of the main screen from the aged (in a good way) design of the foyer; but that’s just part of the magic of this unassuming Tollcross institution. 

How to support the Cameo Picturehouse: Enjoy a drink in its gorgeous art deco bar, whether or not you’re seeing a film. 

Annie McNamee
Annie McNamee
Contributor, Time Out London and UK
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76. Abaton Kino, Hamburg

The nearby Savoy Filmtheater is another cinema you’d kill to have as your local, but we’ve gone with the Hamburg-to-it-core Abaton Kino for this list. This cult cinema was founded just in time to ride German cinema’s 1970s new wave and give screentime to young filmmakers Fassbinder, Herzog and Wenders. For English-speaking tourists, it’s a great place to catch a subtitled released – ask for ‘OmU’ or ‘originalton mit Untertiteln’.

How to support Abaton Kino: Pick up one of the Barbie-style ‘A’ tees from the online shop.

Phil de Semlyen
Phil de Semlyen
Global film editor

75. Edison Film Hub, Prague

The intellectual cinema hub where the curator’s hand is always twitching at the drapes. Opened in 2019 as a sharply programmed arthouse cinema inside the 1920s Edison Transformation Station, this UNESCO-protected building is not just about screenings – expect thought-provoking film introductions and lectures. Its serious Czech Functionalism vibes and Bauhaus-inspired furniture make it a destination for design pilgrims as much as cinephiles. 

How to support Edison Film Hub: Check out the programme before you go. The cinema also runs festivals and events for film professionals and lovers.

Kate Bettes
Kate Bettes
Local expert, Berlin
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74. The Labia Theatre, Cape Town

One of South Africa’s oldest indie cinemas, this Cape Town destination has welcomed moviegoers with its warm royal-blue facade and neon tube lighting since 1949. The Labia initially served as an Italian embassy ballroom before becoming a full-time film joint, screening arthouse classics, cult favourites, and mainstream fare. Apartheid legislation never impacted the Labia, which famously ignored segregationist seating. The cinema’s silver screen attendees include Matt Damon, Salma Hayek and Werner Herzog. 

How to support The Labia Theatre: Watch a film on its streaming platform.

Shaurya Thapa
Shaurya Thapa
Film writer

73. Magic Lantern Cinema, Tywyn, Wales

The seaside town of Tywyn, north Wales, is known for quirky attractions like the narrow-gauge Talyllyn Railway and the ancient Cadfan Stone. The Magic Lantern – winner of 2025’s inaugural BIFA Cinema of the Year Award – is no less charming. This historical assembly hall dates back to 1893, with movies showing here since 1900. Today, the building’s painted bright red, stocked with a 4K projector and 7.1 surround sound, and adorned with paintings of R2D2, Hitchcock and Wallace and Gromit on the walls of its 120-seater theatre.

How to support the Magic Lantern: Check out the memberships, gift vouchers, and a colourful array of Magic Lantern merch.

James Balmont
James Balmont
Freelance arts and culture journalist
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72. The Sun Theatre, Melbourne

One of Time Out’s favourite Melbourne suburbs is home to one of our favourite move-watching haunts. The Sun has been shining of this corner of the city since the late ’30s, growing from a massive single screen to the eight-screener it is today, with a balance of new releases, cult classics (it’s midway through a two-year-long Tarantino season) and 70mm screenings. Art Deco elegance, excellent programming and legendary choc tops? What more could you ask for in a local cinema? 

How to support The Sun: Buy just about the only cinema gift card with no expiry date and gift the Melbournian movie-lover in your life a dream ticket.

Phil de Semlyen
Phil de Semlyen
Global film editor

71. The Regal Theatre, Adelaide

South Australia’s oldest gal has just hit her 100th birthday but looks as fresh as a daisy. The art deco stunner, perched on the eastern edge of Adelaide, was born a Princess (Theatre) in 1925, spooling silent films beginning with the Mary Pickford-led Little Annie Rooney. A single-screen beauty, she’s had a fresh facelift, reopening in October 2020 with a champagne screening of all-time classic, Casablanca.

How to support the Regal Theatre: Sign up to their Movie Club newsletter to get first dibs on all their latest events.

Stephen A Russell
Stephen A Russell
Contributor
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  • Cinemas
  • Hostafrancs

Tucked away on a quiet street in Hostafrancs, Zumzeig is far more than just a cinema. As a non-profit cooperative, this intimate cult venue fights the good fight against soulless multiplexes, proving that indie spaces can thrive by offering a unique cinephile experience. It’s now a cherished base for local talent, where emerging filmmakers showcase their debuts. The programming is meticulously curated, blending acclaimed hits fresh from the international festival circuit with a selection of documentaries and short films you simply won’t find anywhere else.

How to support Zumzeig Cinema: Stop in at the cinema bar The Bistrot for a post-film debrief and some homemade 
empanadas.

Rita Roig
Rita Roig
Editora Cultura i Notícies

69. Giunti Odeon, Florence

There has been a cinema on this site, the Palazzo dello Strozzino, since 1922 and the palazzo itself dates back to the 15th century. This gorgeous setting – designed by Marcello Piacentini – has since been renovated and transformed, reopening in 2023 as a multicultural center in association with the Giunti publishing house. By day a bookshop, in the evening the bookstore closes and the cinema opens. Also on site is a restaurant, which stays open until midnight. 

How to support Giunti Odeon: buy a beautifully illustrated history of the cinema.

John Bleasdale
John Bleasdale
Film journalist, author and podcaster
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68. Bio Skandia, Stockholm

Bet your local cinema doesn’t have a ceiling trumpet. This Stockholm landmark’s Golden Trumpet, depicting a Roman goddess playing the lyre, was once connected to the auditorium’s organ – the 1920s answer to Dolby Atmos. It’s just one of the lovely historical details that connect the venue’s silent era days with its present-day role as a haven for Stockholm’s cinephile crowds and the city’s film festival. It's one of only 10 indie cinemas in the Swedish capital, down from 110 in 1943. Constantly moving with the times, elegant but with a sense of fun and community, it doesn’t need to blow its own trumpet – but we will.

How to support Bio Skandia: Join Stellan Skarsgård, and Ethan and Maya Hawke, and buy a golden plaque with your name on it for one of the seats backrests. Email 
info@bioskandia.se for details.

Phil de Semlyen
Phil de Semlyen
Global film editor
  • Cinemas
  • Independent
  • Portobello Road

Is there a more indulgent cinemagoing experience in the world than the Electric Cinema’s front-row beds? The sort of venue where even a Mission: Impossible movie feels like a slow cinema experience, the Electric is equally dedicated to the cause of understated luxury and olde-worlde touches (the bar and snack counter is inside the auditorium. With a sister cinema down the road in White City, this offshoot of the Soho House members club is London’s ultimate special occasion cinema,. Just don’t nod off, mid-movie. 

How to support Electric Cinema: Gift a voucher to a friend. 

Phil de Semlyen
Phil de Semlyen
Global film editor
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66. Hyde Park Picturehouse, Leeds

I went to university in Leeds, and in the middle of Hyde Park – essentially a neighbourhood almost solely comprised of crumbling, student back to backs – there was and still is one absolutely shining cultural jewel. Unlike the rest of the neighbourhood, it’s been beautifully maintained, to the point that the most notable of its gorgeous period features (which includes an external box office!) is its original exterior gas lighting – it’s the only gaslit cinema left in the entire world. Despite the Edwardian touches, the programme is a thoroughly modern mix of art house and the classier kind of blockbusters.

How to support Hyde Park Picturehouse: Sign up for one of the memberships tiers – 16mm, 35mm and 70mm) – or a free 15-25 membership. 

Andrzej Lukowski
Andrzej Lukowski
Theatre Editor, UK

65. Kino Babylon, Berlin

Travel back to 1920s Berlin at Kino Babylon – an atmospheric arthouse cinema and window into the city’s short-lived Weimar-era golden age. Opened in 1929, it shows silent classics like Nosferatu and Chaplin films with live orchestra, complete with its original theatre organ. But much of Babylon Mitte’s story is hidden beneath the nostalgia. Opening just months before the Great Depression in a district shaped by Jewish communities, it housed a Nazi-era communist resistance cell, survived World War II bombings, and ran as a state-run cinema under East German rule. 

How to support Babylon Kino: Munch popcorn at its free Saturday night midnight screenings.

Kate Bettes
Kate Bettes
Local expert, Berlin
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64. Lumière Cinemas, Christchurch

After Christchurch’s earthquake-inflicted dim days of the 2010s, the Lumière’s projectors fired up again in its two screens: the Bernhardt seating 72, and the Bardot which seats 42. Ensconced in the historic, Gothic Revival bones of the former Canterbury College, erected in 1877, it’s a heritage-listed dream across the road from the Botanical Gardens. Park yourself on a teal banquette in the Bijou Bar and choose between contemporary arthouse fare or golden oldies that gleam, befitting the joint’s old-school lush look. 

How to support Lumière Cinemas: Sign up to their Inner Circle for free and you’ll get a free ticket for every seven you book, plus free coffee weekdays before midday.

Stephen A Russell
Stephen A Russell
Contributor
  • Cinemas
  • Independent
  • Kadıköy

On Istanbul’s Asian side lies one of the city’s oldest indie cinemas. First designed in 1964 as a theatre, the building received international recognition for its futuristic design and acoustics. It’s been a family-owned since 1968; and these days exclusively screens arthouse films and plays host to the Istanbul Film Festival. A beloved cultural landmark, it remains one of Istanbul’s most characterful cinemas. 

How to support the Kadıköy Sineması: Take in one of the Turkish films on the programme.

Demetrios Ioannou
Demetrios Ioannou
Contributor, Greece
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62. Kino Lucerna, Prague

Step inside Palác Lucerna to find Kino Lucerna – the art nouveau-meets-art deco cinema that’s been enchanting Prague since 1909. Check out the Kino Lucerna sign with its original fin de siècle typography. (It’s just behind that hanging sculpture of St. Wenceslas riding an upside down horse.) Inside, the 453-seat Great Hall is a lavish red and gold affair of stucco, ornamental gilding and brass light fittings, while the seats in the intimate Small Hall are decorated with famous filmmakers. 

How to support the Kino Lucerna: Tuck into a traditional Czech pastry at the café or stay late for a dance at the Music Bar. 

Kate Bettes
Kate Bettes
Local expert, Berlin
  • Film
  • St Kilda

When its founder, Frank O’Collins, a Melbourne lawyer, threw open its doors in April 1936, audience members flocked through the jazz moderne-inspired beauty to worship movies like Carole Lombard and Fred MacMurray’s screwball comedy, Hands Across the Table. After surviving several crises, the twin-level, single-screen cinema has since been heritage-listed. Offering rep cinema, including legendary screenings of Talking Heads’ Stop Making Sense, the Astor also screens 75mm presentations of the latest blockbusters. The homemade choc tops remain Australia’s best movie accompaniment. 

How to support the Astor Theatre: check out the jam-packed calendar stacked full of film gems, including the Cinemaniacs program, and go see as much as you can!

Stephen A Russell
Stephen A Russell
Contributor
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60. Close-Up Cinema, London

Close-Up could easily be mistaken for a rustic coffee shop if it weren’t for the Lynch and Tarkovsky books in the window. Inside, past the leather couches and pot plants, you’ll find a Criterion Closet-esque lending library that covers everything from John Cassavetes to Takeshi Kitano – with over 26,000 DVD and Blu-ray titles available to borrow if you hold a membership. In the back is the main attraction: a 40-seat screening room serving strictly arthouse fare, from experimental shorts programmes to must-see world cinema.

How to support Close-Up Cinema: Membership’s a tenner a month, and you get a massive 50 percent off tickets, plus access to an entire archive of international home media. 

James Balmont
James Balmont
Freelance arts and culture journalist

59. Glasgow Film Theatre, Scotland

If it weren’t for its distinctive lit-up doorway, the Glasgow Film Theatre could be mistaken for a prison. But behind this windowless facade is a beautifully preserved 1930s picturehouse which has served as the beating heart of Glasgow’s film scene for nearly a century. Its eclectic programming is a particular strength – turn up on any given day and choose between brand new blockbusters, cult classics, and very indie shorts – but it’s the local film festivals and youth outreach schemes that elevate it from ‘cool cinema’ to proper community space. 

How to support the Glasgow Film Theatre: Volunteer as an usher at one of its many festivals or events. The cinema recruits fresh blood three times a year, but spaces are limited.

Annie McNamee
Annie McNamee
Contributor, Time Out London and UK
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58. David Geffen Theater, Los Angeles

You’d kind of expect a movie museum to have a movie theater, and the Academy Museum doesn’t disappoint. Housed inside the concrete half of a massive soap-bubble–like structure, the 1,000-seat David Geffen Theater screens Oscar winners, from-the-archives treasures and blockbuster remasters alike – often with a cast or crew member or historian in attendance. The image quality is as spectacular as the assortment of film formats it can accommodate, including notoriously flammable nitrate. (The 288-seat Ted Mann Theater, housed underneath the museum, is no slouch either.) 

How to support the David Geffen Theater: An annual membership to the museum (which includes screening discounts) starts at $100.

Michael Juliano
Michael Juliano
Editor, Los Angeles & Western USA

57. Everyman Bath, UK

Until recently running as the Tivoli Cinema but now part of the UK’s ultra-luxe Everyman chain, this Bath five-screener is a movie house to sink into, ideally with a cocktail or non-alcoholic prosecco by your side. None of the screens seats more than 60 – the available-to-hire Director’s Lounge has only a dozen seats – which lends a cosy charm to the moviegoing experience, although all are kitted out with state-of-the-art laser projectors. The elegant bar area is a major draw, too: the kind of place you’d go even if you weren’t seeing a movie. Although, do both. 

How to support Everyman Bath: Allow Olivia Colman to sell you a membership here.

Phil de Semlyen
Phil de Semlyen
Global film editor
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56. Colosseum Kino, Oslo

Las Vegas has The Sphere; Oslo has the Colosseum. This cinema’s immense spherical dome i​s the size of St Peter's Basilica, helping the main auditorium deliver a pin-your-ears-back THX experience even George Lucas would ​give the thumbs up ​to. The building has history in every brick, both good (Louis Armstrong and Billie Holiday both played here) and bad (so did the occupying Nazis), but the​se days, a dedication to turning a movie outing into a show is what s​ets the Colosseum apart.    

How to support Colosseum Kino: Buy a Kinopluss card for 299 krona/month (£23) and see all the films.

Phil de Semlyen
Phil de Semlyen
Global film editor

55. BAM Rose Cinemas, New York

In an era of dine-in cinemas, high-tech seats and immersive 4D gimmicks, there’s something refreshing about a theater with no schtick. The Rose is, simply, a classic: no assigned seats, just a ticket line, a candy-and-popcorn counter, dark screening rooms and excellent sound. Part of Brooklyn’s grand old arts centre, it’s a place to see movies the way they’re meant to be seen: all thrills, no frills. 

How to support BAM Rose Cinemas: Membership starts at a $100 but gets you big discounts on live performances as well as cheaper cinema tickets (and free popcorn).

Delia Barth
Delia Barth
Global Head of Video
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54. The Texas Theatre, Dallas

Infamous as the cinema where JFK assassin Lee Harvey Oswald hid post-shooting in 1963 (three rows from the back and five seats from the aisle), the Texas continues to remember its moment in history every November 22. Each year the same programme plays: Cry of Battle and War is Hell (what Oswald was watching when arrested), plus Oliver Stone’s JFK, which used the location for filming in 1991. The bar also leans into the ’60s with a record player and ‘bring your own vinyl’ policy.

How to support the Texas Theatre: Buy yourself a Texas Theatre Lee Harvey Oswald tee.

Jane Crowther
Jane Crowther
Film journalist, author and broadcaster

53. Raj Mandir, Jaipur

Jaipur is reputed as a royal city with its larger-than-life forts and palaces. And resting atop Jaipur’s movie crown is Raj Mandir, the largest single-screen theatre in the world. With its glittery chandeliers, curved staircases, and wavy ceiling decorations that resemble smooth cake icing, going to the movies has never felt this lavish. Despite its widespread area, crowded queues and houseful shows have been a staple of this cinema since 1976. 

How to support Raj Mandir: Follow it on Instagram to keep a track of the Bollywood movies on the release calendar.

Shaurya Thapa
Shaurya Thapa
Film writer
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52. Shin-Bungeiza, Tokyo

One of Japan’s most sacred repertory theatres can be found above a pachinko parlour in northern Tokyo, and it’s the kind of place that keeps cinema-going wildly fun. Think double-features from Japan’s golden age, rock docs and concert films, kung fu cinema marathons, and even Gary Oldman all-nighters – the likes of which take place every other Saturday from 22:00 to 06:00. There’s a hefty discount if you decide to see two films in a row, as well – handy for those who have slightly busier schedules. 

How to support Shin-Bungeiza: Sign up for the ‘Friends Club’ and you’ll get priority booking, free drinks, discounts, and exclusive screenings.

James Balmont
James Balmont
Freelance arts and culture journalist
  • Cinemas
  • Independent
  • Hollywood
  • price 1 of 4

The Egyptian Theatre opened in 1922 as a lavish tribute to the discovery of Tutankhamun’s tomb, with a sparkling sunburst ceiling and Luxor-like promenade off of Hollywood Boulevard. After falling into disrepair in the 1990s, it was revived by the American Cinematheque non-profit, who brought it back to its former glory, and screened old school favourites. It’s since been bought by Netflix, but you can still watch classic movies here, as well as the streamer’s own projects. 

How to support the Egyptian Theatre: Become a member of American Cinematheque for $85 a year and get $5 off tickets and invites to member-only screenings.

Leonie Cooper
Leonie Cooper
Food & Drink Editor, London
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50. Rio Cinema, London

This two-screen east London icon sets the bar for community cinemas everywhere. Inclusive and passionate, the Rio throws its doors wide open for the over-60s with classic matinees, LGBTQ+ crowds with its Pink Palace screenings, new parents with a carers and babies club, and the Letterboxd-savvy with just about everything. Specialist film fests like Doc'n Roll and Queer East have a home here, as do local film clubs like the Arabic Cinema Club. Basically, everyone’s welcome in an old auctioneer’s shop that’s now one of London’s favourite cinemas.

How to support the Rio Cinema: Stop by the Rio’s buzzing bar – open seven nights a week – even if you’re not seeing a film. 

Phil de Semlyen
Phil de Semlyen
Global film editor

49. Cinéma Studio 28, Paris

I liked the look of Studio 28 so very much, that when I was in Paris recently, I went inside and watched a movie entirely in French. I do not speak French. Such is the hypnotic lure of this petite picture palace on a quaint Montmartre hillside, which dates back to 1928. A favourite of surrealists and avant-garde artists including Luis Buñuel and Salvador Dalì, the cosy single screen features a set of eccentric lamps designed by Jean Cocteau. Très beau

How to support Studio 28: You can visit the cafe – and enjoy a drink in the walled garden - without buying a cinema ticket. 

Leonie Cooper
Leonie Cooper
Food & Drink Editor, London
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48. Cinema Orion, Helsinki

Orion is Helsinki’s most beloved neighbourhood cinema. For decades it was run by the national film archive, screening classics. When the archive was moved in 2019, the cinema faced closure – until devoted fans secured its future. Today the programme mixes smart crowd-pleasers with arthouse fare. The clever art deco interior features columns that make the lobby appear longer, plus an original orchestra pit and famously comfortable seats. 

How to support Cinema Orion: The cinema was saved by selling seats with engraved brass plaques honouring famous film-makers – and you can still buy one and fund its future

Antti Helin
Antti Helin
Local Expert, Helsinki

47. Cine Gaumont, Buenos Aires

A cinema has been operating across from Argentina’s Congress building since 1912. Since then, it’s been renamed in tribute to French film pioneer Léon Gaumont and come to be regarded as the home of Argentine cinema. But what sets this three-screen movie temple apart is its commitment to accessibility and low ticket prices. In a city where film is deeply woven into cultural life, Gaumont is a living archive, a cultural refuge and a powerful statement about the value of cinema as public heritage. In Buenos Aires, loving cinema is easy. Understanding it starts at Gaumont. 

How to support Cine Gaumont: book in for a contemporary or classic Argentine film on the big screen.

Pilar Tapia
Pilar Tapia
Editor, Time Out Argentina
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46. House Samyan, Bangkok

Nestled on the fifth floor of Bangkok’s Samyan Mitrtown shopping mall, and boasting leafy balcony views over golden Wat Hualamphong and the wider skyline, this beloved three-screen cinema would be unassuming if it were not curiously shaped like a house. A pillar of the city’s cineaste community, House Samyan is recognised as one of the only places in Bangkok regularly showcasing independent and international programming – with classics like One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest going toe-to-toe with Taiwanese new wave classics and gems from Y2K Japan.

How to support House Samyan: Keep an eye on the website for discounts, or buy a lifetime membership for just 500 baht.

James Balmont
James Balmont
Freelance arts and culture journalist

45. Orinda Theatre, California

This cinema’s neon shark fin blade is a local landmark, visible from the highway and a lure for Bay Area movie fans. Built in 1941, the Orinda boasts gorgeous murals by Anthony Heinsbergen (whose work is also seen at The Hollywood Roosevelt Hotel, The Beverly Wiltshire hotel and Los Angeles City Hall). Ingeniously, Heinsbergen used black light paint so the mural glows in the dark, though he didn’t add the jeans to one naked young man, covered up later after prudish complaints. 

How to support the Orinda: Every first Saturday of each month the cinema shows a Disney classic as part of its Disney Restorations Series – many of which haven’t been in circulation for years. 

Jane Crowther
Jane Crowther
Film journalist, author and broadcaster
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44. Cinémathèque de Tanger, Tangier

Starting out as an art deco theatre, Cinema Rif was a cultural mainstay in the Moroccan capital since 1938. After a 2006 restoration, the Rif got a second screen, revamped chairs, and a new name: Cinémathèque de Tanger. Even staring at the walls of this time capsule can give you a cinephile’s contact high with vintage posters of North African classics and Morocco-based Hollywood hits like 1946’s Tangier (yes, Casablanca wasn’t the only one). 

How to support Cinémathèque de Tanger: If you’re in the mood to spend some more dirhams after a film, support its film preservation efforts.

Shaurya Thapa
Shaurya Thapa
Film writer

43. Grand Teatret, Copenhagen

First opened in 1913, this golden oldie has gone from hotel ballroom to six-screen film palace in the ensuing 100-odd years. Upgrades, refurbs and a recent expansion – it now has a sister cinema, the 84-seat Gloria Biograf, around the corner – tell of a venue that caters for hip young Danes and older cinephiles with equal care. An early supporter of Scandinavian filmmakers like Thomas Vinterberg, Nicolas Winding Refn and Lukas Moodysson, it’s a pretty decent talent spotter too.   

How to support Grand Teatret: Buy a gift card or, if you’re local, rent a film from Grand Teatret’s streaming platform.

‘I can’t choose between Grand Teatret in Copenhagen and Abaton Kino in Hamburg. It’s because of the people who run them and the vibe they have managed to create. I feel that I like people when I’m in these two cinemas’ – Ruben Östlund (Triangle of Sadness)

Phil de Semlyen
Phil de Semlyen
Global film editor
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42. The Garden Cinema, London

London’s once-booming repertory scene got its own mini-revival when this gorgeous subterranean cinema opened in 2022: initially with two screens, now with a third and an upstairs atrium to go with its snug, Parisian-style basement bar. You can almost call it the ‘BFI northbank’, with seasons celebrating the likes of Jia Zhangke, Ingrid Bergman and Ken Loach and a steady stream of exciting new arthouse releases. The ‘pay what you can’ screenings speak to its community spirit. We love it – you will too. 

How to support The Garden Cinema: For £25, annual membership offers discounts, a free ticket and invites to special events.

Phil de Semlyen
Phil de Semlyen
Global film editor

41. Stadkino, Vienna

The arts come together in Vienne’s Albertina Modern museum, but it’s old masters like Jim Jarmusch, Jane Campion and Aki Kaurismäki they celebrate on the ground floor. Here, Stadtkino combines 21st century minimalism with an old-school commitment to European cinema – and, thanks to the Ludwig & Adele restaurant, European grub. The lightbox-style marquee outside regularly advertises premieres and retrospectives. Geographical and metaphorically, Stadtkino is at the heart of Vienna’s cultural life.

How to support Stadtkino: Pick up one of the cinema’s ‘Liberté, Égalité, Kinoliebé’ t-shirts from the online shop.

Phil de Semlyen
Phil de Semlyen
Global film editor
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  • Film
  • Surry Hills

Small but perfectly formed, the 56-seater Golden Age in Sydney’s Surry Hills draws deep on Hollywood’s history abroad. The home of Paramount Pictures in Australia from 1940 until the ’70s, she was mothballed for a spell. Rising like a phoenix in 2013, with 1940s seats sourced from as far afield as Zurich, she reopened as a boutique cinema, projecting cult classics alongside special screenings of current indie gems.

How to support the Golden Age: Join the cult, as the website says, and become a member for only $30 annually.

Stephen A Russell
Stephen A Russell
Contributor
  • Cinemas
  • Independent
  • Greenwich Village
  • price 1 of 4
  • Recommended
Angelika Film Center & Cafe, New York
Angelika Film Center & Cafe, New York

A Noho indie institution, the 1989-opened Angelika is the flagship venue of a group that also curates the architecturally significant Village East, among others. A noted venue for the Tribeca Film Festival, the buzzy first floor café is a film industry magnet, while the underground screens rumble with passing subway trains and show a diverse, quirky programme year-round – including a 72-hour Shia LaBeouf marathon that the controversial actor attended and live-streamed as an art performance in 2015.

How to support The Angelika: Come for the movies and stay for the gourmet fare in the café under the impressive chandelier. You may rub shoulders with a future filmmaker. 

Jane Crowther
Jane Crowther
Film journalist, author and broadcaster
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38. Le Louxor, Paris

Few cinemas have had a life as turbulent as Louxor since it first opened in 1921. Listed as a historic monument in 1981, turned into a gay nightclub in 1987, then abandoned for 22 years, it owes its rebirth entirely to a neighbourhood campaign. Now owned by the City of Paris, and after a full renovation completed in 2013, the Louxor has three screens. The 340-seat Youssef Chahine auditorium offers film fans an incredible half-Egyptian, half-art deco décor, recreated exactly as it was and unique in Paris. 

How to support Le Louxor: Pick up a 10-ticket pass for €66, valid for a year.

Antoine Besse
Antoine Besse
Responsable des rubriques restaurants et bars

37. Cinema Troisi, Rome

Born from a cultural collective organising open air summer screenings in the Trastevere section of central Rome, Cinema Troisi is a cinema which boasts a rich calendar of cultural events with screenings and Q&As with actors and directors and a terrace bar to relax and have a coffee or glass of wine. Open 24 hours a day and 365 days a year, this is a vibrant cultural highlight in the historical heart of the city. And if you visit in the summer be sure and check out their open air programme.

How to support Cinema Troisi: pick up an iconic Piccolo America t-shirt.

John Bleasdale
John Bleasdale
Film journalist, author and podcaster
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36. Grand Theatre Cinema, Shanghai

Designed in 1928 by Hungarian architect László Hudec, The Grand is one of Shanghai’s oldest cinemas and was once widely regarded as the best in Asia. Today’s multiplex spans 1,800 seats across six screens, accommodating everything from Avatar to the Shanghai International Film Festival. Head past life-size models of Arnie and Spiderman in the foyer, and you’ll find the marble flooring and lotus-shaped ceiling that made it famous in its heyday. Sadly, though, the ushers no longer wear top hats.

James Balmont
James Balmont
Freelance arts and culture journalist

35. Irish Film Institute, Dublin

Hidden behind an unassuming façade in Dublin’s Temple Bar, the Irish Film Institute boasts three gorgeous screens in former Quaker meeting rooms and a sunny, bright atrium. As well as a wide and varied international programme, it celebrates Irish film like nowhere else, with regular slots reserved for new local films and repeat favourites like Oscar nominee The Quiet Girl on the programme for over a year. 

How to support the IFI: Memberships are available from €40 per year, or €25 for concessions.

Helen O’Hara
Helen O’Hara
Film journalist, author and broadcaster
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34. Cineteca Madrid, Madrid

Where the refrigerators and boilers of the city's old slaughterhouse once stood, today we find a paradise for film lovers. Cineteca has three screening rooms but the most spectacular is the Azcona, with a design that will leave you speechless. After attending one of the screenings (for the modest price of €5), film series, workshops or seminars that make up its programme, you can grab a bite to eat in the cantina or an aperitif on the charming summer patio. 

How to support Cineteca: To make sure you don't miss out on any of the programming, subscribe to its newsletter and you'll never be left without a ticket. 

Marta Bac
Marta Bac
Directora editorial, Time Out Madrid

33. Grand Cinema Sunshine Ikebukuro, Tokyo

Bigger means better at the Grand Cinema Sunshine – a still-new mega multiplex in Tokyo that spans ten floors and a whopping 12 screens, with enough luxury seating to accommodate nearly 2,500 people. To get to the upper floors, you’ll pass 140 posters detailing the story of cinema itself, with everything from Metropolis and Tokyo Story to Jaws and Shoplifters supplying the ‘Time Gallery’ that lines the escalators. Go on past the American-style diner and the sky lounge, with its terrific Tokyo views, and you’ll find the largest IMAX screen in Japan towards the top – comprising two floors and measuring 25.8 metres wide and 18.9 metres high.

How to support Grand Cinema Sunshine: The ‘Moviegoer’s Club’ piles on savings for every movie you watch, with various tiers offering a range of benefits. 

James Balmont
James Balmont
Freelance arts and culture journalist
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32. The Castro, San Francisco

This 1922 Spanish Baroque style picturehouse in Frisco’s LBGTQ+ Castro neighbourhood starred as itself in Gus Van Sant’s Milk, the fleapit that ’70s self-styled ‘Mayor of Castro’ and inclusivity campaigner Harvey Milk used to frequent and campaigner from. It’s been through a major renovation recently which uncovered 32 previously unseen decorative dragons and ensured the future of a beacon for queer culture. 

How to support The Castro: Buy tickets for live music, drag shows, movies, comedy nights and the San Francisco International Film Festival.

Jane Crowther
Jane Crowther
Film journalist, author and broadcaster
  • Cinemas
  • Independent
  • Shaftesbury Avenue
  • Recommended

At ground level, it looks like a pleasant, not overly large coffee shop. But above there’s a pleasingly old-school cinema awning, and down the stairs you’ll find a chic bar and one of the busiest homes for foreign language and independent cinema in the UK. Come for the unsurpassed commitment to alternative film and to read all the classic film posters on the walls of the loo, stay for the tiny pots of jelly babies and snacks.

How to support the Curzon Soho: ‘Classic’ membership starts at £55 per year, and there’s free membership for under-25s.

‘I have seen the most arresting films here and always with good friends from all over London. And The French House pub is close by for after-film debate’Andrea Arnold (American Honey)

Helen O’Hara
Helen O’Hara
Film journalist, author and broadcaster
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30. Hayden Orpheum Picture Palace, Sydney

This 90-year-old movie haunt perched on Sydney’s Military Road is a spectacular work of art deco style by Aussie architect George Newton Kenworthy. Since its $2.5 million restoration in 1987, it currently runs with six screens, each with its own distinct colour scheme. If the ballroom designs, lavish velvet curtains and colour-changing neon lighting doesn’t offer enough vintage razzmatazz, the 1925 Wurlitzer pipe organ in the main screen definitely does. It’s a true-blue Aussie legend. 

How to support Hayden Orpheum Picture Palace: Pick up a discounted book of 10 tickets from the website. 

Shaurya Thapa
Shaurya Thapa
Film writer

29. Cine Paris, Athens

The cinema with the greatest house lights in the world, Cine Paris screenings are backdropped by an illuminated Parthenon. Dating back to the 1920s, this open-air screen was originally founded by a Greek hairdresser who’d lived in Paris, moving to its current rooftop location in the 1960s. Now curated by Greek streaming platform Cinobo, you can expect a mix of Greek and international classics and contemporary films. 

How to support Cine Paris: picking up snacks and drinks at the venue helps sustain its nightly screenings and long-term survival.

Demetrios Ioannou
Demetrios Ioannou
Contributor, Greece
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28. Watershed, Bristol

Founded at a time when most of the Victorian warehouses around it were still derelict, this Bristol institution was the nation’s first true media centre when it opened in 1982. Fans like the late, great Pete Postlethwaite – the first to sponsor a seat in the three-screen venue, in 2004 – would later champion the ‘adventurous, cosmopolitan’ nature of the place. They’re values this cherished cultural hub still upholds today with its diverse programming and community focus. Their famous nachos, meanwhile, have their own cult following.

How to support Watershed: Donate via the website and receive an ‘I Love Watershed’ badge as thanks.

James Balmont
James Balmont
Freelance arts and culture journalist

27. Cinemateca Portuguesa, Lisbon

Are you a cinephile with too much free time who thinks any day is a good day to watch a classic? This is your place. Based since 1980 in a restored townhouse on Rua Barata Salgueiro, the Cinemateca Portuguesa screens films daily across three comfortable theatres, including the main Dr Félix Ribeiro room, with 227 seats. At Palácio Foz, home to Cinemateca Júnior, a permanent exhibition traces the history of cinema from shadow plays to modern classics. 

How to support Cinemateca: Visit the digital archive or buy their latest book editions.

Hugo Geada
Hugo Geada
Jornalista
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26. Wushang Dream Mall International Cinema, Wuhan

Ever wanted to watch a movie while sitting in the world of Blade Runner? The Wushang Dream Mall International Cinema will scratch that itch. This monolithic space is a frankly staggering design feat inspired by shapes seen from aerial views of great metropolises.This cinematic colossus spans 14 theatres, with giant LED screens and 12.1 channel sound systems enriching the experience for up to 2,733 (!) patrons. The marble-and-metal interiors, meanwhile, provide neo-Brutalist views while also functioning as canny sound absorbers. 

How to support Wushang Dream Mall International Cinema: Stay up-to-date with listings on WeChat!

James Balmont
James Balmont
Freelance arts and culture journalist

25. Le Champo, Paris

The romance of the Latin Quarter finds cinematic manifestation in a repertory cinema full of film history and cult spirit. Le Champo’s love of classic cinema still glows as brightly as one of its founder, 1930s lighting entrepreneur Roger Joly’s bulbs. François Truffaut used to spend entire days here, while his fellow Nouveau Vague-rs were regulars too. These days you might catch a Tarantino or Jarmusch taking in a black-and-white classic. That Jacques Tati silhouette in the foyer tells you that you’re into cinephile heaven.  

How to support Le Champo: Pick up a Champo card: 5 tickets for €35 over six months. 

Phil de Semlyen
Phil de Semlyen
Global film editor
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24. Genesis Cinema, London

The only cinema on this list named after a Star Trek episode, the Genesis is an East End treasure. Here, they’re constantly on the look out for new ways to entertain Londoners that stretches beyond the latest releases – there’s cult screenings, poetry slams, swing dancing and live music – but really, it’s all about offerings an elite moviegoing experience. Picking up a bratwurst hotdog, a pint and a ticket to a new movie and getting change from £20 on a Wednesday is hard to beat. And the cinema’s plans for the future should keep the vibe alive for years to come.

How to support the Genesis: Students get free membership and £5 tickets. Beat that.

Phil de Semlyen
Phil de Semlyen
Global film editor

23. Metrograph, New York

As most Ludlow Street addresses are, this Lower East Side arthouse is stylish, with exposed brick, wood-backed seating and an elegant on-site commissary. But, importantly, it’s even more taken with how things look onscreen: the meticulously curated programming appears in 35mm, 16mm and DCP formats, with thematic series, archival films and rare international titles filling its highbrow calendar. 

How to support Metrograph: Starting at just five bucks a month, a Metrograph membership is a great value for serious cinephiles, granting you access to exclusive premieres, top-talent Q&As and at-home streaming. 

‘If I could just pick one cinema anywhere in the world it would be the Metrograph’Mia Hansen-Løve (Eden)

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22. Queen's Film Theatre, Belfast

The ‘home of independent cinema in Belfast’ is inconspicuously situated within a Georgian terrace beside Queen’s University, but stepping inside is often compared to entering a TARDIS, thanks to the surprisingly expansive and buzzy setting within. This beloved spot has been delivering boundary-pushing films since 1968, when the founder of the local film festival persuaded the University to transform a lecture theatre into a 250-seat cinema. Today, you’ll find everything from Hong Kong gun-fu to smutty classics from John Waters playing alongside Wuthering Heights and Hamnet across its two screens.

How to support Queen’s Film Theatre: Look into the membership schemes, including one that offers cut-price tickets for people under 26. 

James Balmont
James Balmont
Freelance arts and culture journalist

21. Puskin Art Cinema, Budapest

Cinemas don’t come more opulent than this Pest temple to the medium. Famous for its marble pillars and the golden-ceiling main screen with its plush red seats, Puskin is as Belle Époque as they come. Expect undubbed arthouse and indie films from around the world, plus mainstream releases, regular family-friendly screenings and the odd civic gathering. Film history is everywhere you look here: its five screens are named Metropolis, Amarcord, Körhinta, Annie Hall and Mephisto. 

How to support the Puskin: Buy a movielover in your life a gift certificate (and a trip to Budapest).

Phil de Semlyen
Phil de Semlyen
Global film editor
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  • Cinemas
  • Multiplex
  • Leicester Square
  • Recommended

With that distinctive ‘L’ shape structure, this grand picture palace looks a Tetris block fell from the sky. Within, though, you’ll find movie lore in every nook and cranny. Albeit, Odeon Luxe Leicester Square doesn’t really do crannies – not since its 2018 refit downsized the main auditorium from 1600-odd to 800 seats and upscaled the luxury levels. The home of West End premieres since forever, there’s history galore and detailing to celebrate it. It’s not Europe’s cheapest cinema, but with Dolby Atmos sound and Dolby Vision laser projection, it’s always an experience to remember.

How to support Odeon Luxe: Book seats in the Royal Box and watch a movie like a king or queen. 

Phil de Semlyen
Phil de Semlyen
Global film editor

19. Busan Cinema Center, Busan

The epicentre for the Busan International Film Festival looks like a floating spaceship with its cantilevered, LED cap which tilts and pulsates with a rainbow of light, dwarfing movie lovers beneath it. An architectural wonder dreamed by architect Wolf D Prix (who won an international competition with his vision), that 42,600-light roof is a Guinness World Record holder as the largest of its kind in the world. 

How to support Busan Cinema Center: Take one of the 4000 seats during the October international film festival

Jane Crowther
Jane Crowther
Film journalist, author and broadcaster
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18. Traumpalast Leonberg, Germany

Singapore? Tokyo? Dubai? No. You’ll find the world’s biggest cinema screen in Leonberg, population 49,000. Traumpalast Leonberg is home to an IMAX screen measuring 814.8 square metres, roughly 38.8 metres wide, weighing more than 230 kilograms, and fitted with a dual laser projection system and 12-channel digital sound. Seating over 500 people, Traumpalast took home a Guinness World Record in 2022 for housing the largest operating cinema screen on the planet. 

How to support: Get lost in the wider multiplex, home to more than 1,800 seats across multiple screens, plus restaurants, a bowling alley and even a bed cinema.

Kate Bettes
Kate Bettes
Local expert, Berlin

17. Broadway Cinematheque, Hong Kong

Connected at the hip to the stunning ‘Kubrick’ café-bookshop, and boasting one of the best collections of Hong Kong movie media in the city via a gift store overflowing with ephemera, Broadway Cinematheque is a true indie cinema institution. With four screens and nearly 500 seats, Kowloon’s answer to the BFI hosts festivals of Asian, European and global queer cinema alongside anime blockbusters and arthouse classics. Put simply, there is no better place for cinephiles in Hong Kong. 

How to support Broadway Cinematheque: Become a member for free tickets, discounts, and access to over 3,000 DVDs in the cinema’s library.

James Balmont
James Balmont
Freelance arts and culture journalist
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16. Cinema Modernissimo, Bologna

One of Bologna’s best kept secrets lies deep beneath the main square of the red city. Here, Bologna’s Cineteca has restored the beautiful art deco interiors of this subterranean cinema, dedicating each seat to a legend of cinema and embroidering their names on the back. Each June it’s one of the venues for the Cinema Ritrovato Festival, which shows silent classics and recent cult favourites.

How to support Cinema Modernissimo: Drop by the Caffè Pathé for refreshments.

John Bleasdale
John Bleasdale
Film journalist, author and podcaster
  • Cinemas
  • Independent
  • Piccadilly Circus
  • Recommended

Leicester Square may be the spiritual home for London’s movie scene, but its heartbeat is in Piccadilly. Here, in the old Trocadero, Picturehouse opened its flagship cinema in 2015, a cosy yet expansive temple of intelligently programmed fare with seven screens, state-of-the-art tech, a restaurant, a café and the city’s greatest confectionary stall. It’s tough to run a cinema in this part of London, with the vagaries of landlords and leases to negotiate, but this boutique multiplex is doing a top job. 

How to support Picturehouse Central: sign up for membership and get free tickets and access to the members’ bar (and its spectacular rooftop).

Phil de Semlyen
Phil de Semlyen
Global film editor
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14. Kino International, Berlin

Berlin moviegoers’ favourite communist-era film palace is back. Reopened in February 2026 after an 18-month renovation, Kino International stands once again as the 1963 GDR flagship it was born as: a concrete-clad icon of post-war modernism. The upgrade preserves its heritage details – rippling wooden wall slats, silver sequined premiere curtain – while slipping in some contemporary cinema tech as well. Outside, the hand-painted posters remain, along with socialist-era worker motifs on the façade. The original nuclear bunker for GDR apparatchiks, sadly, remains off access. 

How to support Kino International: Rock up to MonGay, the weekly queer cinema celebration.

‘I saw Fitzcarraldo there, one of the movies that made me want to be a filmmaker. It’s a special place’ – Pablo Larraín (Spencer)

Kate Bettes
Kate Bettes
Local expert, Berlin
  • Cinemas
  • Independent
  • East Village

Much is made about its film-star looks but Village East gets its cinephile bona fides from its eclectic assortment of limited-release pictures, foreign cinema gems and 5-perf 70mm screenings (bringing even more clarity and color to recent expansive titles like Sinners, One Battle After Another and The Testament of Ann Lee). There’s also no better spot in the city to take in an anime flick, with regular screenings and special series throughout the year – the Village East was one of the first cinemas in New York to screen the form. 

How to support Village East: Sign up for a free Angelika membership and you’ll earn reward points, access to exclusive mystery screenings, free downloads and more. 

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12. Eden Théâtre, La Ciotat

There are old cinemas, and then there’s the oldest cinema in the world. The Eden Théâtre belongs firmly in the second category. Built in 1889 in the town that would star in one of the Lumière brothers’ earliest films, it became a cinema ten years later and has never stopped being one. Listed in 1995 and renovated in 2013, it now screens a mix of mainstream releases and classics. Eden – as fits the name – is cinemagoing’s origin story.

How to support Eden Théâtre: Join the association Les Lumières de l’Eden, which runs the cinema.

Antoine Besse
Antoine Besse
Responsable des rubriques restaurants et bars

11. Grand Rex, Paris

The godfather of cinema, Louis Lumiere, first displayed commercial movies to a paying audience in 1895 at the Salon Indien du Grand Café in Paris (alongside his brother Auguste). In 1932, he attended this massive Auguste Bluysen-designed Art Deco ‘atmospheric’ as it opened with a chorus line of ‘Rex Girls’ and 80 doormen in tails and white gloves. The Mediterranean-inspired theatre was so large it had its own basement hospital, a 34ft tower and 3,300 seats. Though it had a stint as a repatriation centre for POWs post-war, the Rex has continued to dazzle as an entertainment centre since, with its famous Féerie des Eaux fountain and light show (plus bubbles), big-name concerts and A-list movie premieres. 

How to support The Rex: Take the Rex Studio tour, an interactive backstage nosey that explores special effects, the projection room and the twinkling ‘star tunnel’ that all a-listers walk through during premieres. 

Jane Crowther
Jane Crowther
Film journalist, author and broadcaster
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10. Cineteca Nacional de México, Mexico City

Built in the wake of a devastating fire that ripped through the nation’s film archives in 1982, the Cineteca Nacional de México’s new campus-like space rose from the ashes and now holds the seventh art vaults (it can accommodate 50,000 reels) for CDMX, a 10-screen complex showing world cinema and plenty of hang-out spots for tourists and locals alike. An easy stroll from Frida Kahlo’s museum home, it has an aluminium perforated canopy that floats over a cornucopia of galleries, restaurants and shops. There’s regular film seasons, talks and free outdoor screenings plus cinema snacks with a kick (pour jalapeño butter on your popcorn). Fire up your imagination and palate. 

How to support Cineteca Nacional: Be one of the million movie fans who annually show up to watch Spanish-subtitled world cinema in this temple to film

Jane Crowther
Jane Crowther
Film journalist, author and broadcaster
  • Cinemas
  • Independent
  • Wrigleyville

With its golden interior, projected clouds drifting across the auditorium ceiling like a daydream on a loop and a lounge stocked with film memorabilia and cocktails inspired by cinema’s glory days, the Music Box Theatre is a Chicago institution. Operating since 1929, the main auditorium blends Italian and Spanish architectural flourishes with unapologetic confidence, anchored by a lovingly restored organ played by house organist Denis Scott, who accompanies silent films and special screenings and remains a beloved constant of the annual Music Box Christmas singalong. While its programming has long secured its status as an arthouse landmark, the Music Box’s real magic lies in its community spirit – bringing together filmmakers, obsessives and casual moviegoers, united by the celluloid flicker of the silver screen.

How to support the Music Box: A $60 membership lands you free monthly members’ screenings, free refills on popcorn and soda, discounts at restaurants and more.

Shannon Shreibak
Shannon Shreibak
Things to Do Editor, Chicago
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  • Cinemas
  • Independent
  • Leicester Square
  • Recommended

Where else can you solve-along to Murder, She Wrote one day and stay up all night watching The Lord of the Rings the next? The Prince Charles – no coronation here – offers probably the most eclectic and fascinating programming in the UK. Cinema here can sometimes be interactive – as well as singalongs, die-hard fans know to bring, and throw, plastic spoons at screenings of The Room – but there are also regular 35mm screenings of cult classics, and seasons celebrating a wide range of film stars, themes and even running times: choose from the ‘long-ass movies’ or ‘short-ass movies’ programmes. A typical week’s programme will include arthouse classics, anime, kung fu movies and celebrity Q&As, everything from The Seventh Seal to 10 Things I Hate About You

How to support the PCC: Stock up on their impeccably cool movie-related tees from about £20.

‘You also know that on any given day, you can close your eyes, press your finger to the programme and you’ll hit something great. It’s like tuning into your favourite radio station’ – Paul Thomas Anderson (One Battle After Another)

Helen O’Hara
Helen O’Hara
Film journalist, author and broadcaster
  • Film
  • Lavapiés
  • Recommended

One of Pedro Almodóvar's favourite cinemas, Cine Doré, now home to the Spanish Film Archive, is one of those places where time stands still when you walk through its doors. The art nouveau building, with its spectacular salmon-coloured façade, white mouldings and unmistakable red seats, gives it an elegant and welcoming feel that’s impossible to replicate. The cinema has two screens – three if we count its pleasant courtyard, which becomes a summer cinema when the temperatures rise – a café and even a small bookshop. In addition to programming very interesting film series of all kinds, they also organise talks, presentations, discussions... and tickets cost only €3. What more could you ask for? 

How to support Cine Doré: If you are as much of a film buff as Pedro, you can get an annual pass for only €40.

Marta Bac
Marta Bac
Directora editorial, Time Out Madrid
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6. Koninklijk Theater Tuschinski, Amsterdam

Conceived by Jewish émigré from Poland, Abraham Tuschinski, the cinema that bears his name on Reguliersbreestraat tells the story of Nazi genocide in its history. Built in 1921 as an Art Deco, Jugendstil and Amsterdam School jewelbox, Tuschinski intended his theatre to be ‘grandiose as a temple and beautiful as a palace’. A feast for the eyes via gleaming tiling, polished wood and swirling stencilling, it was considered the finest picturehouse in the Netherlands. But during World War II, Tuschinski was one of millions of Jews sent to concentration camps, his moniker ripped from the theatre as it was renamed The Tivoli. He died in Auschwitz but his legacy lives on in the spectacular cinema, named most beautiful in the world by Time Out in 2021

How to support the Royal Theatre Tuschinski: Book an audio tour before the movies start rolling.

Jane Crowther
Jane Crowther
Film journalist, author and broadcaster
  • Cinemas
  • Independent
  • Fairfax District
  • price 1 of 4
  • Recommended

Whether you’re a film aficionado or just want something different from your typical multiplex fare, you need to visit Quentin Tarantino’s single-screen repertory cinema in LA. Known for its slogan ‘always on film’, it screens only 35mm prints – often from the director’s personal collection. The monthly schedule is an explosion of genre cinema, with everything from world cinema and kung fu films to obscure horror and exploitation movies. Become a true LA cinephile and attend one of the midnight screenings or monthly grindhouse double features – you might even catch some legendary filmmakers in attendance. Just make sure to follow the strict ‘no cellphone’ rule (the theater recently made headlines for calling the cops on a phone user who refused to leave), and don’t forget to arrive early for the curated pre-shows of shorts, cartoons or vintage trailers. 

How to support the New Beverly: Sign up for the theater’s newsletter or listen to its podcast to stay up to date with everything it has going on.

One of the last things I saw there was The Bad News Bears and that theatre was rocking. It feels like a really fun raucous church ceremony’ – Rian Johnson (Knives Out)

Gillian Glover
Gillian Glover
Things to Do Editor, Los Angeles
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  • Cinemas
  • Independent
  • South Bank
  • Recommended

The BFI may be hidden under a bridge like a troll, but perhaps that fits the fairytale treasure trove inside. This Brutalist gem is the centre of film in the UK, both an archive and an exhibition space, with a superb library of film publications and the ‘Mediatheque’, a room full of crescent-shaped couches where you can delve into the archive of British film and TV treasures. But the four screening spaces are the real jewel in the crown, hosting films from every era in cinema history and acting as a regular stop on the Oscar trail (recent masterclasses featured Jessie Buckley and Guillermo del Toro). Look out in particular for their festivals, from Woman With A Movie Camera to the LGBTQ+ festival Flare to the biggest of the lot, the London Film Festival. 

How to support the BFI: You can find everything from director-shaped candles to Shining socks in the BFI’s small but mighty store.

Helen O’Hara
Helen O’Hara
Film journalist, author and broadcaster

3. Film Forum, New York

New York’s premiere independent, nonprofit cinema has been running for half a century and for good reason: It’s a small but mighty operation, with four screens running 365 days per year with an always-interesting mix of American indie premieres, foreign art films, genre works, directors’ retrospectives and special programming (ranging from filmmaker intros to live piano accompaniments of Chaplin classics). 

How to support Film Forum: Buy a patron membership or support the theater’s continued presentation of high-quality documentaries. 

‘I have probably had the most inspiring moviegoing experiences of my adult life at Film Forum’Robert Eggers (Nosferatu)

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2. The Stella Cinema Rathmines, Dublin

Whether it’s the fabulous facade or the orderly queue of excited patrons that entices you in, one thing’s for sure at The Stella: this is a cinema experience like no other. Gloriously restored to the glitz and glamour of its 1920s heyday, the bar and foyer buzzes to the sound of big band jazz as twinkling chandeliers and velvet ropeways usher you through. A stunning spectacle awaits at the end of the hall, with the cinema’s vast auditorium (formerly a dancehall and ballroom) boasting ornamental reliefs, a coved ceiling, and rows of plush leather chairs and footstools, all lit up by a fleet of tiny orange lamps. Moviegoing has rarely felt so luxurious.

Feeling decadent? Order a cocktail named after Citizen Kane or Dirty Harry and have it delivered right to your seat for a touch of old-school extravagance.

James Balmont
James Balmont
Freelance arts and culture journalist
  • Cinemas
  • Multiplex
  • Hollywood

Nearly as synonymous with Hollywood as the neighborhood’s hilltop sign, this 1927 pagoda-shaped movie palace reigns as the go-to for red carpet premieres, both in real life and on the silver screen. There’s a reason that reputation persists—and why even the most jaded Angelenos will squeeze past tourists posing with the concrete imprints of Marilyn Monroe and R2-D2 in the forecourt.

From the second you step foot inside the Chinese Theatre’s palatial lobby, you can tell you’ve escaped to someplace special. Inside the Exotic Revival auditorium, the radiant red curtain, grandiose golden columns and dazzling starburst on the ceiling make every screening feel like it’s the opening night of Star Wars in 1977. First-run flicks here simply look superb, particularly since its IMAX conversion in 2013. Just a heads up, though, that the historic theater is attached to a six-screen multiplex; you’ll want to ignore those smaller spaces and stick to the main theater (listed online as IMAX or auditorium 7). 

How to support the Chinese Theatre: Though screenings are the go-to, you can opt for a 30-minute walking tour if you simply want to soak in the cinematic history.

‘I’ll spend the extra $10 just to see the latest mainstream film playing in the amazing IMAX auditorium. It’s lush and classic, and the projection and sound is just the perfect presentation of a film’ – Sean Baker (Anora)  

Michael Juliano
Michael Juliano
Editor, Los Angeles & Western USA
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