Jolly Cinema of Ravenna
The Jolly Cinema is a historic picture house in Ravenna, a city in the Emilia-Romagna region of northern Italy celebrated worldwide for its extraordinary collection of early Christian and Byzantine mosaics, eight of which are inscribed on the UNESCO World Heritage List. Like many Italian neighbourhood cinemas of the mid-20th century, the Jolly Cinema represents the popular cultural life of a city that is simultaneously an international heritage destination and a living community, where mosaic workshops, pinecone forests, and local cinema traditions coexist.
- Type
- Cinema; historic picture house
- Period
- 20th century
- Style
- Mid-20th-century Italian cinema architecture
- Location
- Ravenna, Province of Ravenna, Emilia-Romagna, northern Italy
- Coordinates
- 44.4116° N, 12.2027° E
- City context
- Ravenna: former capital of the Western Roman Empire and the Byzantine Exarchate; eight UNESCO World Heritage Sites
At a glance
- Type
- Cinema; popular entertainment venue
- Period
- 20th century
- Style
- Italian mid-century cinema architecture
- Location
- Ravenna, Emilia-Romagna, northern Italy
- Architect
- Not recorded in available sources
Overview
The Jolly Cinema is a historic cinema located in Ravenna, the capital of the Province of Ravenna in the Emilia-Romagna region of northern Italy. Ravenna was the capital of the Western Roman Empire during the 5th century, the seat of the Ostrogothic Kingdom, and the capital of the Byzantine Exarchate, leaving behind a concentration of late antique and Byzantine monuments that are collectively inscribed on the UNESCO World Heritage List. Within this historically charged setting, the Jolly Cinema represents the popular and everyday cultural life of the modern city.
History
Neighbourhood cinemas such as the Jolly flourished across Italian towns and cities during the mid-20th century, serving as the primary form of popular entertainment before the widespread arrival of television. In Ravenna — a city accustomed to balancing its extraordinary archaeological legacy with everyday urban life — local cinemas like the Jolly offered residents a space distinct from the city’s monumental heritage. Many Italian neighbourhood cinemas of this type faced closure or repurposing in subsequent decades as multiplexes and home entertainment changed audience habits.
What you see
The Jolly Cinema sits within Ravenna’s urban fabric, a city whose streets are punctuated by extraordinary monuments — including the Mausoleum of Galla Placidia, the Basilica of Sant’Apollinare Nuovo, and the Basilica of San Vitale — all decorated with 5th- and 6th-century mosaics of world importance. The cinema building reflects the utilitarian but characterful architecture of Italian popular culture in the postwar era, a counterpoint to the imperial grandeur that defines Ravenna’s global reputation.
Cultural significance
The Jolly Cinema documents the social history of 20th-century Ravenna alongside its more celebrated ancient and medieval heritage. Cultural Heritage Online has documented this site as part of its commitment to recording the full spectrum of Italian cultural life, from UNESCO-listed monuments to the everyday spaces that shaped community identity in the 20th century.
Practical information
- Address
- Ravenna, 48121 RA, Italy (check current listings for exact address and operational status)
- Opening hours
- Check official website or local listings for current screening schedules
- Admission
- Check current ticket prices via local cinema listings
Getting there
Ravenna is served by its own railway station with direct connections to Bologna (approximately 1 hour) and Ferrara. From the station, the historic centre and most of Ravenna’s monuments are accessible on foot or by bicycle. Local buses serve the wider city; Ravenna is also connected to the A14 motorway via the Ravenna exit.
