Film historian Gero Gandert and the film critics Ulrich Gregor and Erika Gregor registered Friends of the German Cinematheque on 30 March 1963, seeking to make the newly established
Deutsche Kinemathek’s collections and other rarely shown works accessible to the public. Before acquiring its own venue, the association programmed monthly screenings at the
Akademie der Künste, premiering independent titles such as Adolfas Mekas’s
Hallelujah the Hills for German audiences in 1964. Using private loans and donations, the group purchased the disused Bayreuther Lichtspiele in Berlin-Schöneberg and reopened it on 3 January 1970 as the Arsenal, Germany’s first non-profit archive cinema. The cinema relocated to the Filmhaus on
Potsdamer Platz in 2000, and on 1 November 2008 the association formally adopted the name Arsenal – Institut für Film und Videokunst e.V. to reflect its expanded archival and educational remit. ==Activities==