t’s a great idea that worked out well once in Berlin last night but it will not likely be the start of a new trend – open air cinema in the middle of the winter.
“Metropolis” is a magical film and well worth shivering along with 2,000 other hard-core fans of the 1927
classic in the middle of a snowstorm last night — an unforgettable experience.
But it’s hard to imagine open-air cinema in February becoming a winter-time rival to the drive-in.
The Berlin Film Festival came up with the splendid venue to give a very large public at large a chance to see the restored version of “Metropolis”, the mother of all sci-fi films that first flopped in 1927 before becoming one of the most famous movies ever made. The trade press has been gushing about the discovery in Argentina in 2008 of 30 minutes of the film that were cut and feared lost for good.
Organisers of the Berlinale gave the world premiere of the restored 83-year-old film the red carpet treatment with a special prime time screening at a sold-out 1,800-seat theatre. Because demand for the tickets greatly outstripped supply, Berlinale director Dieter Kosslick decided to beam a live stream of the screening of ”Metropolis” and the live orchestra accompanying it simultaneously to a giant 312-metre square outdoor screen set up at the Brandenburg Gate in the heart of Berlin.











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