Visit the film archive


Group tour programme: to start, visitors see the exhibition on the history of Hungarian film located in the aula of the Archive. Tableaux organized into different topics give the visitor insight into the world and locations of Hungarian film, a behind-the-scenes glimpse of filmmaking and film preservation, as well as interesting background.

The tour continues in the film storerooms, where we keep around 67,000 prints and 260,000 reels, the majority 35 mm and 16 mm film, from the earliest days of silent movies to the present day. Our staff of professionals work on preserving this material, restoring and digitizing it, processing its content and making it available. The guide relates how, from where and when the Film Archive stock increased from the date of its foundation (1957) to today, as well as how films kept here are acquired, cared for, stored, restored and categorized.    

Following introductions to the history of the Archives and film, technical matters are presented: visitors can see and try for themselves old movie cameras and projector equipment, and then in several workrooms learn about the technical and physical characteristics of filmstrip as the physical storage medium. The skills of the cutting table are revealed, as well as how to spot when nitrate-base stock begins to disintegrate.   

In the tour, film equipment is presented, including for example a Debrie camera, which was the most popular film recording device from 1931 to the 1970s. The Debrie camera was used to film such greats as Hyppolit, the Butler (1931), Ludas Matyi (Mattie the Gooseboy, 1949) and Álmodozások kora (The Age of Daydreaming, 1964).

Visiting the Film Archive (HNFA)

Next is the studio, meeting point for analogue and digital techniques. This place links past with present and future, providing the opportunity to rescue cinematic information on different storage media. Visitors also see the projection room and the basics of how to operate projectors, which are slowly becoming museum pieces due to the switchover to digital. 

There is also a chance to view the special collections of the Archive (photo and poster collections, national specialist library): researchers have access to nearly 27,000 film posters, 350,000 film-related werkphotos, around 20,000 volumes, 3000 manuscripts, 3000 volumes of periodicals, 4000 screenplays, 34 film periodicals and foreign film publications. At the end, we invite groups to watch selected thematic screenings in our projection room, featuring a few of the mass of films stored in the Archive.

Tours are arranged between 9 am – 3 pm Monday-Friday. Maximum group size: 15 persons (we can arrange several tours of our collection for larger groups). Each tour takes approximately 2 hours. Tickets: HUF 500/person, students HUF 300/person. Appointments must be made by e-mail minimum two weeks prior to visit.

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