Imagine sitting beneath a star-strewn sky on a balmy summer evening, listening to a bit of Puccini or Pink Floyd. Or perhaps Sibelius. Or Sinatra. That’s the Film Festival on the Rathausplatz…
- Free showings of operas, concerts, and gigs
- Giant screen starts up from dusk
- Large gastronomy section
- …with international food & drink
- Shows some EURO 2024 matches too
- 2024 dates: Jun 29 – Sept 1
- Book a concert experience* for Vienna
- See also:
- English cinemas
- Events in Vienna
- Vienna in July and August
The film festival
(View across the film festival area from the roof of the Burgtheater opposite; press photo © stadtwienmarketing)
Each summer, the square in front of Vienna’s Rathaus city hall turns into an open-air cinema with a difference when the film festival rolls into town.
The term film festival needs further explanation. We’re not talking Steven Spielberg retrospectives or a celebration of Estonian film noir. Instead, it’s all about the music.
A giant screen shows recordings of opera productions and concert performances from across the music spectrum. Everything from the Beatles to Bernstein.
It’s all open air and set against a backdrop of fine central European neo-gothic architecture. You can’t get more cultural bonus points than that.
Of course, people cannot live on culture alone.
This being Vienna, the area leading up to the seating around the giant screen becomes a gastronomic paradise, with numerous bars and restaurants serving food and drink from around the world.
(Enjoying a bite to eat before the show starts)
Plates of couscous and curry perhaps jostle with sausage and suckling pig, pasta and pancakes, steak or teriyaki salmon. All washed down with your beverage of choice.
And if this all sounds like a marvelous way to pass a summer’s evening, it is. With one caveat. It does get incredibly busy.
Around 725,000 visitors took in the atmosphere last time out. Finding a place to sit and eat in the gastronomy area can be especially tricky in the hour or two preceding the film.
(If you want a dinner & music experience with a seat guarantee, try some of the light classical venues mentioned here.)
The film festival originally focused on opera alone, but now features a distinct mix of musical styles.
Ad:
Classical compositions still dominate, but jazz, blues, rock, folk, even punk (albeit unplugged) can make appearances.
My last two trips to the event involved Ed Sheeran in concert at Wembley and the Les Misérables 25th anniversary concert. A recording of Eric Clapton’s Baloise Session might follow an operetta by the Hungarian composer, Emmerich Kálmán.
In 2024, we have concert recordings by the Rolling Stones, Queen, Amy Winehouse, Norah Jones, Gregory Porter, Coldplay, P!ink, Steve Gadd, the Imagine Dragons, and others.
On the classic front, the summer brings us Don Quixote, Manon Lescaut, Madame Butterfly, Turandot, Othello, La Fille du régiment, L’Orfeo, the Magic Flute, Aida, the Marriage of Figaro, Beethoven’s 9th symphony, Gershwin’s Rhapsody in Blue, works by Bruckner and Schoenberg, and more.
For the full 2024 programme, check the official website (see below).
(View through the gastronomy area to the big screen)
A different kind of performance
With the UEFA EURO 2024 European Championships taking place this summer, the location also turns into a public viewing venue for selected matches…
- Any involving the Austrian national team: sadly, Austria’s participation ended with the last-16 match against Turkey
- The semi-finals: July 9th and 10th (both 9pm)
- The final: July 14th (9pm)
My kids tell me the place gets absolutely packed for matches, so check locally for advice on attending. Or consider alternative public viewing options.
2024 dates, tickets & tips
The 2024 festival runs every day from June 29th to September 1st, 11am to midnight. The films begin at dusk, though.
So how much is entry to this cultural extravaganza going to cost you?
A big fat nothing.
You buy your food and drink as you’d expect, but the film showings are free. No ticket required.
Ideally, go early enough to enjoy your food and still have time to get a decent seat before the film starts. Having said that…while the central seats fill up fast, those in the wings often have spaces until fairly late and still offer a good view.
You can come and go as you like; you have no obligation to remain until the end if the mezzosoprano takes too long to finally succumb to a tragic illness in Act III.
How to get to the film festival
The Rathausplatz is very central and on the usual walking route around the city centre.
Subway: Reach the Rathausplatz on the U2 subway line; get off at the Rathaus stop (surprise surprise)
Tram/bus: Alternatively, take trams 1, 71 and D to Rathausplatz / Burgtheater or tram 2 to Parlament
Address: Rathausplatz, 1010 Vienna | Website