Film screen­ing of "Fitzcar­raldo" at the Licht­blick art­house cinema

In the 2025/26 winter semester, the Lichtblick arthouse cinema will focus on the role of the forest theme in film history. The film programme compiled under the motto "In front of all the trees - a cinematic walk through the forest" presents different perspectives on the topic each week. A total of 15 films from different countries and cultures such as Japan, Peru and Italy will be shown. Part of this is a screening of the film "Hundreds of Beavers" on Tuesday, 11 November, at 8.30 pm in the "Pollux" cinema in Paderborn.

Tickets for the screening are available both via the Pollux website and at the box office. In addition, the Lichtblick arthouse cinema is once again part of the AStA Kulturticket, which means that at least 35 free tickets per screening are available for Paderborn University students. These can be redeemed at the cinema box office at the earliest one week before the performance on presentation of a student ID together with an official photo ID.

More information on the programme and the individual screenings can be found on the website of the Lichtblick arthouse cinema.

"Fitzcarraldo" (1982)

An opera house in the middle of the Peruvian rainforest with Enrico Caruso on stage - this is exactly the dream of Brian Sweeney Fitzgerald (Klaus Kinski). To finance this, he uses his lover Molly's money to buy a river steamer to transport rubber across the Amazon. But there are reasons why no one has ever dared to transport valuable cargo via this route. And so Fitzgerald is not only confronted with the pitfalls of the jungle. Director Werner Herzog was one of the first, most important and last representatives of the New German Cinema, which established itself in the early 1960s. "Fitzcarraldo " , "Aguirre - The Wrath of God" and the reinterpretation of "Nosferatu" are among Herzog's best-known works, in which he always worked together with actor Klaus Kinski.

Lichtblick arthouse cinema

The Lichtblick arthouse cinema is a student initiative at Paderborn University and has been enriching Paderborn's cultural landscape since it was founded in 2003 with sophisticatedly curated themed film series. These range from early silent films to contemporary cinema. During these forays through more than 120 years of film history, all kinds of classics, marginalised films, curiosities and forgotten treasures have been brought back to the big screen. This, including the analogue projection of 35 mm film, is made possible by the long-standing cooperation with the Paderborn "Pollux" cinema, which is unique in Germany.

This text was translated automatically.