Ariana Cinema
سینما آریانا | |
Interactive map of Ariana Cinema | |
| Address | Nadir Pashtun Road Kabul Afghanistan |
|---|---|
| Coordinates | 34°31′10″N 69°10′49″E / 34.519566220223766°N 69.18034978261572°E |
| Type | Movie theatre |
| Seating type | 600[1] |
| Construction | |
| Opened | 1963 |
| Demolished | 2025 |
| Rebuilt | 2004 |
Ariana Cinema (Dari: سینما آریانا Sīnemā Ārīāna) was a movie theater in Kabul, Afghanistan located near the Pashtunistan Square on the north side of the Kabul river bank. It is considered to be the second oldest cinema in Kabul city center, after Behzad Cinema. It was publicly owned.[1]
History
The Ariana Cinema was originally opened in 1963.[2] In its prime days, it was one of the most famous theaters in the city.[3]
As with other local landmarks, the cinema was destroyed during the Battle of Kabul (1992-96) and remained closed and damaged after the Taliban came to power in 1996. After the fall of Taliban, a group of French filmmakers raised $ 1 million to help complete the cinema. During a visit to Kabul in 2002, Bernard-Henri Lévy met with Siddiq Barmak to discuss the reconstruction of the cinema. On his return to Paris, he co-founded an association to raise funds for the project with Claude Lelouch and Bosnian Danis Tanović, The 'Un Cinema pour Kaboul' association in Paris. In collaboration with the AINA in Kabul, they completed the reconstruction of the Cinema in March 2004. [4][5] The renovation and new facilities was done with the help of Siddiq Barmak.
The cinema received damage later by a January 2010 suicide bombing near the cinema.
As of 2020 it remains one of four cinemas still operating in Kabul and it receives about 200 spectators of 600 available, reflecting the decline of cinema of Afghanistan.[1] It remained active until the fall of Kabul to the Taliban on August 15, 2021.[6]
Following the Taliban seizure of power, the cinema was occasionally used as a site to screen pro-Taliban propaganda films. In late 2025, it was demolished, with plans to build a shopping mall on its site.[7]
See also
References
- ^ a b c "Kabul Once Had 23 Cinemas, Now Just 4".
- ^ "Now silent under Taliban, a Kabul cinema awaits its fate". The Independent. 11 November 2021. Retrieved 18 December 2025.
- ^ "Saving the story of Afghanistan".
- ^ دانش, حسین. "سینما پارک کابل، تخریب حافظه فرهنگی یک شهر". BBC News فارسی (in Persian). Retrieved 2 September 2021.
- ^ "Ariana Cinema". Atelier d'Architecture Lalo.
- ^ "Farsi.Ru - آغاز کارسينما آريانا کابل". www.farsi.ru.
- ^ "Historic Afghan cinema torn down for a mall". France24. 18 December 2025. Retrieved 18 December 2025.