Skip to main content

"Metropolis" is the benchmark for all science fiction films. Technology-obsessed and romantic, popular and avant-garde at the same time. Like no other film before or since, "Metropolis" has shaped film history.


Stephan Graf von Bothmer interprets this film of all films virtuously, on a grand scale and with profound depth, using state-of-the-art sounds live on his CineTronium. He was the first musician to present his own new score for the restored version: at the Zoo Palast in Berlin, where both performances sold out. Films inspired by Metropolis also reappear in his latest score: "Blade Runner," "The Fifth Element," "The Matrix," and "The Wall."

Scale-produced, this modern fairy tale tells the story of a city of the future, where workers toil at machines deep in the dark interior of the Earth, while the wealthy above live a life of luxury and light. Until catastrophe strikes... [Fritz Lang, Germany 1926]

Fritz Lang's greatest work is both popular and avant-garde. "Metropolis" is the first film in the world to be inscribed on UNESCO's list of Intangible Cultural Heritage. We are showing this restored version of the masterpiece. A monument of Weimar cinema.

At its heart is the search for a "mediator between mind and hand" to reconcile the classes. At the same time, the film shows how easily technology, power, and mass hysteria can spiral out of control: the machine-woman Maria, revolts, forgotten children, and burning cathedrals make "Metropolis" an apocalyptic allegory. Despite, or perhaps because of, its poignant message, the film remains a breathtaking visual experience.

"Metropolis," the monumental dystopian drama about class conflict, technological intoxication, and the yearning for reconciliation, is more relevant today than ever.

Buy ticket

Additional information
Dates
March 2026
MoTuWeThFrSaSu
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31