Deutsche Kinemathek


The Deutsche Kinemathek – Museum für Film und Fernsehen Berlin is a German film archive based in Berlin, Germany, that makes a significant contribution to the preservation and dissemination of German and international film heritage. Since 2006, the Kinemathek has also made German television accessible to the public via its Television Collection. In 2025 it relocated to a new temporary location at E-Werk, having previously been located at Potsdamer Platz.

History

Mission and Purpose

The Stiftung Deutsche Kinemathek has set itself the task of documenting and researching the history of film and television and promoting scholarly and educational discussions. It is dedicated to collecting and preserving valuable film material, including materials of significant importance in film and television history, and promotes the dissemination of audiovisual heritage through its own exhibitions, publications, educational programs, film series, and other events. It is supported as an institution by the Federal Government Commissioner for Culture and the Media.

Film Archiving, Restoration, and the Festival “Film Restored”

Among the central tasks of the Deutsche Kinemathek are to archive, reconstruct and restore films of historical significance. With approximately 26,000 titles, the Film Archive comprises an extensive collection of German and international silent and sound films of various formats, genres and styles. Numerous films in the archive are available for viewing. Part of the film collection focuses on experimental and documentary films. In addition, numerous works from the signatories of the Oberhausen Manifesto of 1962 are in the archive, as well as the entire film output of the DFFB, which includes the explicitly political films of the first generation as well as the films of the Berlin School. Another focus is on the restoration and digitization of classic film titles. Since 2019, this work has been supported by the Film Heritage Funding Program, which is jointly funded by the federal government, the states and the German Federal Film Board. In 2022 alone, 36 film titles from the audiovisual collection of the Deutsche Kinemathek were restored. Since 2016, the Kinemathek has hosted the film heritage festival Film Restored, which presents newly digitized and restored films from film archives and film heritage institutions.

Worldwide Film Loans and Streaming Services

The films from the archives of the Deutsche Kinemathek are loaned to cinemas, museums and festivals. Every day, somewhere in the world, films from the cinema’s rental collection are shown, the most frequently shown being ‘Drei Haselnüsse für Aschenbrödel’. As a distributor, the Kinemathek also oversees the productions of the German Film and Television Academy Berlin. Its own streaming platform rounds off the services.

Berlinale Retrospective and Classics

Since 1977, the SDK has also been in charge of the Retrospective, the film history program of the Berlin International Film Festival. Since 2013, it has also curated the Berlinale Classics section, which focuses specifically on the digital restoration of classic films. Films in these sections have been screened at the Zeughauskino and the CinemaxX Potsdamer Platz.

Memberships and Partnerships

In addition to FIAF and the Kinematheksverbund, the Deutsche Kinemathek is a member of various national and international associations and networks, including the Arbeitskreis selbständiger Kultur-Institute e. V., the Association des Cinémathèques Européennes, the Federal Association of Museum Education, the German Museums Association, the International Council of Museums, the Berlin Museum’s Association e. V. and the Network of Mediatheks.
Other cooperation partners include the Sunrise Foundation for Education and the Arts, as well as various television partners such as ARD, ZDF and the Grimme Institute.

Leadership and Staff

The Stiftung Deutsche Kinemathek employs between 60 and 100 people, and these figures fluctuate over longer periods. After the death of long-time director Heinz Rathsack at the end of 1989, the film historian Hans Helmut Prinzler took over the management of the Kinemathek in 1990. In 2006, Rainer Rother was appointed Artistic Director. Until March 2012, Paul Klimpel served as Administrative Director, followed by Maximilian Müllner until 2017. Florian Bolenius has been the Administrative Director since August 2017. Since June 2025, he, together with Heleen Gerritsen, the former director of the GoEast Film Festival in Wiesbaden, has chaired the board of the Deutsche Kinemathek – Museum for Film and Television.

Collections and Personal Papers

Throughout their production history, films leave behind a wide variety of materials: three-dimensional sculptures and models, textiles, film-technical equipment, sound recordings, photographs, including scene, portrait and work photos, but also written documents such as scripts, draft sketches, contracts, posters, film programs, censorship documents, filmographic and biographical materials, advertisements, tickets and reviews. The Deutsche Kinemathek holds around one million materials relevant to film history in its collections and has audiovisual materials on 75,000 film titles. An international focus of the collection is the documents on tracing the work of German filmmakers in exile, which is considered the most comprehensive collection of its kind worldwide.
The Personal Papers and Company Archives hold the pre-mortem bequests and estates of more than 600 filmmakers from all professional groups in the film and television industry. The archive of production designer Sir Ken Adam alone comprises more than 6,000 drawings and sketches. In addition to this, the Personal Papers and Company Archives contain over 160,000 sheets of correspondence from Hollywood agent Paul Kohner. Collections from the estates and bequests of influential film legends such as F.W. Murnau, G.W. Pabst, Fritz Lang, Marlene Dietrich, Ulrike Ottinger, Werner Herzog, Fatih Akin, and Bernd Eichinger also offer extensive insight into individual biographies, cultural, contemporary, and production history.

Film Architecture, Costumes, Graphics, and Photography

A special focus of the collection is on materials relating to film architecture and costume design. The Textile Archive comprises more than 5,500 individual objects, of which around 3,200 belong to the Marlene Dietrich Collection. The Graphics Archive stores costume and production designs for around 1,400 film and theatre projects, including more than 28,000 film posters. The Photo Archive contains around one million analog photographs, slides, negatives and digital images, including material on around 45,000 film titles and 15,000 people. Archive materials relating to the films “The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari” and “Metropolis” are in particularly high demand. The Document Archive stores material on 72,500 film titles and more than 20,000 screenplays.

Television Collection

The Television Collection offers an overview of television in both German states and the unified Federal Republic. Currently, more than 13,000 programs are stored in a database and are available in full length to Kinemathek visitors. Highlights include the Grimme Prize archive, the complete collection of “Tatort” and “Polizeiruf 110” in all editions, and an extensive selection from the premiere interview show “0137” with journalist Roger Willemsen.

Digital Access to the Archives

Since 2024, the holdings of the Deutsche Kinemathek can be researched online on its website and are therefore accessible to the general public. Where rights permit, digital copies can be viewed and borrowed directly. Some outstanding collections, such as those of director Werner Herzog, the production archive of Känguruh Film, or the collection of Josef Fenneker’s expressionist posters, are also presented and contextualized on the website. The archive of set designer Ken Adam and the archive of the German Film and Television Academy Berlin can also be accessed online.

Founding and Early Years

On 1 February 1963, the Deutsche Kinemathek, which was founded as a registered association on 6 April 1962, was officially opened with a ceremony at the Akademie der Künste. The foundation was laid by two collections purchased by the Berlin Senate, which the State of Berlin then entrusted to the association for administration and preservation. The first was the extensive collection of director Gerhard Lamprecht, which included a large stock of films, documents, materials and film-technical equipment, and the second was the collection of Albert Fidelius, a descendant of a film distributor, who had collected short feature films, newsreels and documentaries in the mid-1920s. Gerhard Lamprecht became the first director of the Deutsche Kinemathek e. V. After his retirement in 1966, the lawyer Heinz R. Berg managed the Kinemathek until 1970. From the outset, the association’s goal was to establish a film museum, with financial assistance from the German federal government and the state of Berlin.

Moves and Locations in Berlin

After being temporarily housed in various locations in Berlin and after its conversion to a foundation under private law on 1 February 1971, the Deutsche Kinemathek moved to the Deutschlandhaus on Pommernallee 1 in 1971, where the German Film and Television Academy had been based since 1966. After another temporary residency on Heerstraße 18–20 from 1996 on, the Kinemathek moved into new premises at the Sony Center on Potsdamer Straße 2 in 2000.
It represents one of the most significant film history collections in Europe, created through purchases, exchanges and donations. The Kinemathek participates in the national and international exchange of film copies and specialist knowledge, which was demonstrated by its accession to the Fédération Internationale des Archives du Film in 1965 and was further confirmed in 1979 by its membership of the Kinemathekenverbund, a contractually regulated association of German film archives.