This is how the St. Pöltner Zeitung rigorously judged in April 1914 after the opening of the city’s first permanent cinema at the Pittner Hotel.
Until then, the city government had spoken out against the granting of a film license for fear of competition for the newly renovated city theater. The result was the opening of the “Elitekino” in January 1913 just beyond the Traisenbrücke, in Wagram, then still independent.
And in November of the same year, Louis Geni, owner of a traveling cinema known throughout the country, founded his first brick cinema on Mühlweg, right next to the city limits.
The city could no longer ignore the tide of time and concluded a contract with the imperial councilor Karl Wohlmuth, who undertook to build a cinema in Hessstraße according to the wishes of the city. It is not without a certain irony that the rooms of the Stadttheater were temporarily made available to him.
However, Wohlmuth’s cinema was never made, the contract with him was terminated and Franz Pittner was commissioned to direct the city cinema.
The park’s cinema was the largest in the country at the time
Both the theater and the cinema were very popular. In 1923 the city had therefore transformed a former riding stable on the corner of Klostergasse and Rennbahnstraße into a “Parkkino”. With 1,000 seats, it was the largest cinema in Lower Austria.