Cinema is known as le septième art (the 7th art) in France, and Paris has played a starring role in its evolution, today hosting some 900 film shoots per year. Experience cinematic Paris and discover famous film locations, visit Parisian and national film archives, take a behind-the-scenes tour of an art-deco theatre, and catch a movie in one of Paris' trove of atmospheric cinemas.

Snow falls over the canal Saint-Martin in Paris on January 22, 2019.
The canal Saint-Martin, a classic filming location in Paris © CHRISTOPHE ARCHAMBAULT / Contributor / Lonely Planet

The places where the Lumière brothers started cinema

Cinema's beginnings took place south of the capital in the French city of Lyon, when on 19 March 1895, brothers Auguste and Louis Lumière shot the first reels of the world's first motion picture, La Sortie des Usines Lumières (Exit of the Lumières Factories) showing workers leaving their photographic-plate factory (now a museum).

The Lumière brothers took their film to Paris, where they held a private screening on 22 March 1895 at the Société d’Encouragement à l’Industrie Nationale (Society for the Development of the National Industry) with an audience of 200 conference attendees. Later that year, on 28 December 1895, the brothers went on to stage world's first paying public film screening in the basement Salon Indien du Grand Café on boulevard des Capucines in the 9e arrondissement, showcasing 10 short films including La Sortie des Usines Lumières. The site is now part of the Hôtel Scribe; an inscription on the building's facade details its history.

Les Halles forum- a glass building with reflections in the windows of its neighbors across the street
Les Halles forum in Paris © neilerua / Getty

Where to see iconic film sights in Paris

In the heart of the city, deep in the underground shopping mall/transport hub Forum des Halles, 1er, Paris' film archive, Forum des Images, was set up in 1988 as an 'audiovisual memory bank' of the city, with a library and research centre preserving newsreels, documentaries and advertising from over the years. The centre's five-screen cinema shows films set in La Ville Lumière (the City of Light).

Far from the typical tourist track in the 12e, you'll find the film institute Cinémathèque Française. Its permanent collection contains costumes, vintage equipment and posters, film clips and props. Among them are some from the 1902 silent film Le Voyage dans la Lune (The Trip to the Moon), the first-ever science-fiction film, by Paris magician Georges Méliès, who was among the spectators at the Lumière brothers' screening; Martin Scorsese featured Le Voyage dans la Lune in his Oscar-winning 2011 film, Hugo. The Cinémathèque also mounts temporary exhibitions that take an in-depth look at a film or creator. Its on-site cinema screens original-language films including retrospectives of famous filmmakers and artists.

La Cinémathèque Française in Paris, a uniquely shaped building framing a blue sky background
La Cinémathèque Française © Bruno DE HOGUES / Contributor / Getty

Paris' landmark cinemas

Paris has scores of cinemas, with an estimated screen per every 6000 inhabitants at last count, including numerous art house and independent theatres.

Art deco landmark Le Grand Rex, in the 2e, is a listed historical monument that retains its 1932 decor. You still see films and ciné-concerts with orchestras in its seven salles (screening rooms), including its triple-tiered, 2700-plus-seat Grande Salle; take a guided tour, or a fantastic audio-guided, behind-the-scenes tour through the projection room and recording and special effects studios. Kids love it.

Another listed historical monument (dating from 1921), the neo-Egyptian art deco cinema Le Louxor, 10e, also has piano-accompanied ciné-concerts; check the calendar for their short-film festivals, workshops and live-music performances. It’s a scenic view from the terrace overlooking Montmartre's basilica, Sacré-Cœur.

Behind the Rodin-sculpted facade of a 19th-century theatre, the Fondation Jérôme Seydoux-Pathé, 13e, was overhauled by renowned architect Renzo Piano in 2014. Silent black-and-white films are accompanied by a live pianist; it also has an exhibition covering cinematic history. Also in the 13e, Cinéma Les Fauvettes screens silent-era and contemporary films.

The Latin Quarter, 5e, has a wealth of cinemas, from art deco treasures like Le Champo (known for timeless classics) to Le Grand Action (cult films) and The Rocky Horror Picture Show stalwart Studio Galande, which has screened the iconic 1975 sci-fi horror-comedy every weekend for four decades.

Paris' most anticipated cinematic reopening is historical monument La Pagode, a 19th-century Japanese pagoda shipped to France, piece by piece, in 1895 by the then-proprietor of department store Le Bon Marché; he had the pagoda rebuilt in his bamboo-filled garden on rue de Babylone, 7e. Converted into a cinema in the 1930s, it was beloved by generations of Parisian film-goers before financial difficulties forced it to close in 2015. Salvation came in 2017 when New York producer and French-film aficionado Charles Cohen stepped in. Following an €8 million restoration that will preserve the pagoda and garden and add a third salle in its basement, it will reopen in 2020.

For session times at cinemas Paris-wide, check L'Officiel des Spectacles. Foreign films (including English-language films) screened in their original language with French subtitles are labelled 'VO' (version originale). Films that are labelled 'VF' (version française) are dubbed in French. Alternatively, you can catch new-release French films with English subtitles at events held by Lost in Frenchlation at independent cinemas with pre- or post-screening cocktails.

People walk past the Grand Rex cinema, bearing on its facade
The Grand Rex cinema © PHILIPPE LOPEZ / Contributor / Lonely Planet

Film festivals in Paris

Paris' love of cinema is reflected in its array of film festivals.

French and international documentary films screen in and out of competition during late March's 10-day Cinéma du Réel at venues including the Centre Pompidou. Around early July, selected cinemas across Paris offer filmgoers a flat, low-cost entry fee per session over four days during La Fête du Cinéma. From mid-July to mid-August, free film screenings take place under the stars in Parc de la Villette during the Cinéma En Plein Air de la Villette. In August, short films by independent film-makers screen in competition alongside open-air concerts and workshops during the nine-day festival Silhouette.

General view, outside the
Le Louxor cinema, Paris, France © Edward Berthelot / Lonely Planet

Classic filming locations in Paris

Paris is the backdrop for countless French and foreign-made films. Classics span Parisian filmmaker Marcel Carné's Hôtel du Nord (1938), set along Canal St-Martin, to New Wave director Jean-Luc Godard À Bout de Souffle (Breathless; 1960), partly filmed on the av des Champs-Élysées. Or there's the James Bond installment A View to a Kill (1985), with a spectacular jump from the Eiffel Tower; Les Amants du Pont-Neuf (The Lovers on the Bridge; 1991), set against the city's oldest bridge; Jean-Pierre Jeunet’s Le Fabuleux Destin d’Amélie Poulain (Amelie; 2001), about a Montmartre cafe waitress; Richard Linklater's Before Sunset (2004), which opens at magical bookshop Shakespeare & Company; Ron Howard's The Da Vinci Code (2006), with action taking place at the Louvre and Église St-Sulpice; Sofia Coppola's Marie-Antoinette (2006), filmed at the Château de Versailles; Woody Allen's Midnight in Paris (2011), in which Owen Wilson's character is transported back to Hemingway's 1920s Paris from outside the Église St-Étienne du Mont; and Wash Westmoreland's Colette (2018), featuring scenes outside the Moulin Rouge.

For a neighbourhood-by-neighbourhood overview of famous settings, check the Paris Convention and Visitors Bureau's walks on the trail of film locations in Paris.

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PARIS, FRANCE - OCTOBER 25: Tourists take a selfie with Notre-Dame de Paris Cathedral a few weeks before its reopening to the public scheduled for December 7, 2024 on October 25, 2024 in Paris, France. French ministers have floated the idea of ​​charging tourists to enter the world-famous Notre Dame Cathedral in Paris when it opens on December 7 after five years of restoration. "All over Europe, people have to pay to enter the most remarkable religious buildings". French Culture Minister Rachida Dati told Le Figaro newspaper in an interview published Wednesday night. She said she had proposed "a symbolic tax for all tourist visits to Notre Dame, with the money going entirely towards a major plan to conserve religious heritage." (Photo by Chesnot/Getty Images)
PARIS, FRANCE - OCTOBER 25: Tourists take a selfie with Notre-Dame de Paris Cathedral a few weeks before its reopening to the public scheduled for December 7, 2024 on October 25, 2024 in Paris, France. French ministers have floated the idea of ​​charging tourists to enter the world-famous Notre Dame Cathedral in Paris when it opens on December 7 after five years of restoration. "All over Europe, people have to pay to enter the most remarkable religious buildings". French Culture Minister Rachida Dati told Le Figaro newspaper in an interview published Wednesday night. She said she had proposed "a symbolic tax for all tourist visits to Notre Dame, with the money going entirely towards a major plan to conserve religious heritage." (Photo by Chesnot/Getty Images)
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