Thessaloniki Concert Hall, 25th of March and Paralia, Thessaloniki
Building roof M2/ Ticket price: General admission 6€ – discounted 5€/
Pre-sale: from the Megaron box office – online (when it starts): more.com
“Cinema with a View”, Thessaloniki’s favorite open-air cinema, returns to the rooftop of the M2 building at the Thessaloniki Concert Hall.
“Cinema with a View 2026” invites the audience to magical movie nights with a view of the Thermaikos Gulf, through a program of selected films, signed by important creators of modern world cinema.
Cinema with a View Screening Schedule – Summer 2026
August 2026
21:00A Simple Accident until August 26, 2026
Sun 31/08:21:00. Unfortunately, I swear until September 2, 2026
September 2026
Fri 7/0821:00I’ll Leave One Day until September 9, 2026
Mon 14/09- 21:00 Malaga Street until September 16, 2026
Mon 21/0921:00The Greatness until September 23, 2026
More Information
Our favorite summer cinema is back!
From Monday, August 24, 2026, to Wednesday, September 23, 2026.
On the roof of building M2.
Organization: Thessaloniki Concert Hall and Thessaloniki Film Festival
The magical, cool nights of Cinema with a View return this year and promise us unique cinematic escapes, with wonderful films at Thessaloniki’s most beloved summer cinema, Cinema with a View 2026!
The Thessaloniki Film Festival and the Thessaloniki Concert Hall are setting up the best open-air cinema from August 24, 2026, for the twelfth consecutive year, in the most beautiful spot in the city, the roof of the M2 building of the Thessaloniki Concert Hall, with a magnificent view of the Thermaic Gulf.
“Cinema with a View”, the favorite summer hangout of cinephiles, began in the summer of 2015 and is the most popular outing suggestion.
The films we will see at Cinema with a View 2026:
The Palme d’Or at last year’s Cannes Film Festival, the shocking A Simple Accident by the great Iranian filmmaker Jafar Panahi, who insists on making films as an act of resistance and freedom, despite the countless persecutions he has suffered from the regime in his country.
Balancing wonderfully between dark surrealist comedy and political thriller, Panahi delivers us for the umpteenth time an exemplary blend of multi-layered allegory and thorough character study.
Kirk Jones’s endearing and inventive Sorry I Swear, a true, funny, and deeply moving coming-of-age story — a film about the strength, acceptance, and courage to be yourself, even when no one understands you. The film won BAFTA awards for Best Actor and Best Casting.
The delightful I’ll Go One Day, the debut of Amelie Bonin, had the honor of raising the curtain at last year’s Cannes Film Festival. The sensitive portrait of a young woman at a crucial crossroads in life, in a nostalgic romantic comedy with musical elements.
Mariam Touzani’s moving Malaga Street, starring the excellent Carmen Maura, articulates a low-key hymn to life and freedom, subverting all stereotypes about old age. The film won the Audience Award at the Venice Spotlight of the 82nd Venice Film Festival.
Paolo Sorrentino’s anthropocentric drama The Greatness, with social and political implications, features an accessible central character who takes stock of an entire life. The amazing Tony Servillo won the Volpi Cup for Best Actor at the Venice Film Festival for the role.

