Vintage theater interior with ornate decor and plush seating

Grand Rex Studio Tour and Paris Entertainment Venues

The Grand Rex has the biggest cinema screen in Europe. That’s not just a marketing claim — at 300 square metres, the screen in the main auditorium is genuinely enormous, mounted inside an Art Deco palace that was designed in 1932 to make moviegoing feel like an event. The ceiling is painted to look like a night sky. The walls are shaped to resemble a Mediterranean village. And for the past two decades, they’ve been running a behind-the-scenes tour that lets you see how the magic works — from the projection booth to the special effects room to a simulated studio where you direct your own movie scene.

The Grand Rex Studio Tour is one of those Paris experiences that nobody’s first choice but everyone’s favourite surprise. It costs $14, takes 50 minutes, and leaves you with a genuine appreciation for cinema as a craft. If you’ve spent the morning at the Louvre being serious, this is the perfect antidote.

Vintage theater interior with ornate decor and plush seating
Grand cinema palaces like this were built to make ordinary people feel like royalty. The idea was that the architecture should be as impressive as the films — and at the Grand Rex, it still is. The main auditorium seats 2,702 people and looks like a Baroque opera house had a baby with a Hollywood soundstage.
Art Deco cinema facade with ornate architectural details
The Art Deco cinema movement of the 1920s and 1930s produced some of the most extravagant buildings in any European city. The Grand Rex’s facade on Boulevard Poissonnière is one of the finest surviving examples — all vertical lines, geometric patterns, and a tower that lights up at night.
Must-do: Grand Rex Studio Tour — $14, 50 minutes, interactive behind-the-scenes experience. 1,138 reviews at 4.6 stars.

Also worth it: Opera Garnier Entry Ticket — $18, self-guided tour of the most opulent building in Paris.

For mystery fans: Arsène Lupin at the Opera — $32, immersive detective game inside the Palais Garnier.

The Grand Rex Studio Tour: What You Actually Do

The tour — called “Les Étoiles du Rex” — is a self-guided interactive experience that takes you behind the scenes of the cinema. You put on headphones, follow a marked route through restricted areas, and at several points you interact with simulated movie sets. It’s part museum, part theme park, part film school.

Retro cinema room with vintage film projectors and comfortable seating
The projection rooms at the Grand Rex are a time capsule. Vintage projectors, film reels, and the kind of mechanical equipment that digital projection has made obsolete everywhere else. The tour takes you through these spaces with audio that explains what each machine does.

The highlights: you visit the projection booth (with its vintage equipment and a view down into the main auditorium from above), see behind the screen (it’s surprisingly industrial back there), and then enter a simulation room where you “direct” a short scene — adjusting lighting, sound effects, and camera angles. The final room puts you on a simulated film set where you appear in a green-screen movie. It’s cheesy and fun and the kind of thing you’d never seek out but end up talking about over dinner.

Empty red theater seats arranged in rows inside a cinema hall
The main auditorium is only visible from above during the tour — you peer down through a window in the projection booth. The scale is hard to grasp from photos. Imagine a cinema five times the size of any multiplex screen you’ve been in. That’s the Grand Rex.
Person walking down an aisle in a vintage theater with ornate decor
Walking through the Grand Rex’s corridors during the tour gives you a sense of the building’s sheer size. The backstage areas are a maze of staircases, technical rooms, and narrow passages that the public never sees during regular screenings.
Vacant theater showing rows of seats and a large screen
The Grand Rex’s main screen dominates the auditorium. At 300 square metres, it was the largest in Europe when installed and still holds that record. Watching a film here is like seeing cinema the way its inventors intended — as something larger than life.

The tour is available in French and English (audio guide). It takes about 50 minutes but you can linger at any point. There’s no guide physically with you — it’s self-paced, which means you can spend extra time in the projection room if you’re a film nerd or rush through if you’re not. Kids from about age 6 upwards find it engaging. Under 6, the dark rooms might be overwhelming.

The Building: An Art Deco Masterpiece

The Grand Rex opened on December 8, 1932, during the golden age of cinema palaces. It was designed by architect Auguste Bluysen with interior decoration by John Eberson, an American theatre architect famous for creating “atmospheric theatres” — cinemas whose interiors mimic outdoor environments. At the Grand Rex, the auditorium is designed to look like a Mediterranean village at night, complete with terracotta rooftops, arched windows with backlighting that simulates moonlight, and a ceiling painted as a starry sky.

Empty theater with red seats highlighting architectural details
The atmospheric ceiling design was revolutionary in 1932. The idea was to make moviegoers forget they were indoors — to feel like they were sitting in a village square under the stars. Eighty years later, the effect still works. You look up expecting a roof and see sky.

The exterior is equally impressive. The Art Deco facade on Boulevard Poissonnière features a stepped tower that’s visible from several blocks away, and at night the neon signage lights up in the classic 1930s style. The Grand Rex has been a listed historical monument since 1981, which means they can’t change the exterior and the interior restoration has to follow strict guidelines.

Dimly lit cinema theater with rows of red chairs facing a screen
The Grand Rex still functions as a working cinema — it shows new releases on that enormous screen. If you visit Paris during a premiere week, seeing a film here is an experience in itself. The screen is so large that IMAX feels cramped by comparison.

The Grand Rex holds the record for the largest cinema auditorium in Europe with its 2,702 seats. Even by 1932 standards, this was excessive — the cinema was built during the Depression, and filling 2,700 seats was ambitious. But it worked. Parisians flocked to the escapism that the building itself provided, even before the film started. The tradition of Christmas season spectaculars — live shows with special effects that use the full height and width of the auditorium — started in 1954 and still runs every December.

Small audience watching an animated film in a cinema
Seeing a film at the Grand Rex is worth doing even without the studio tour. The sound system has been upgraded to modern standards and the screen size makes action sequences genuinely thrilling. Book a seat in the centre of the stalls for the best experience.

The Opera Garnier: Paris’s Other Spectacular Interior

If the Grand Rex is cinema’s palace, the Opera Garnier is theatre’s. Charles Garnier’s 1875 masterpiece is the most extravagantly decorated building in Paris — and that’s saying something in a city with Versailles on its doorstep. The grand staircase alone took Garnier 7 years to design and is made from seven different types of marble. The main foyer has more gold leaf than some entire churches. And the auditorium ceiling was painted by Marc Chagall in 1964, adding a 20th-century layer to the 19th-century opulence.

Interior view of the grand staircase at the Opera Garnier in Paris
The grand staircase is the first thing you see and it sets the tone for everything that follows. The marble, the bronze torchères, the painted ceiling — this was designed to make arriving at the opera as dramatic as the performance itself. Garnier said the staircase was the building’s real stage.
Golden opulent interiors of Palais Garnier in Paris
The grand foyer runs the full length of the building’s facade. It was designed to rival the Hall of Mirrors at Versailles — and by some measures, it succeeds. The gilded columns, painted ceilings, and chandeliers are overwhelming in the best possible way.
Columns and chandeliers inside the Paris Opera House
The Opera Garnier’s interior is so dense with decoration that you could visit ten times and still notice new details. The columns in the grand foyer are each individually carved — no two are identical. Garnier insisted on this because he believed repetition was lazy.

You don’t need to see an opera to visit. Self-guided tours are available during the day for $18 — you get access to the grand staircase, the main foyer, the auditorium (when not in rehearsal), and the museum of theatre history. The building is Phantom of the Opera’s setting — Gaston Leroux based his novel here, and the actual underground lake that inspired the story still exists below the building (though it’s not open to visitors).

Ornate ceiling and arches of the Palais Garnier in Paris France
Chagall’s ceiling painting in the main auditorium was controversial when it was installed in 1964 — some critics thought his modern style clashed with Garnier’s 19th-century design. Sixty years later, most people agree it’s one of the best things in the building.
Stunning ornate interior of Palais Garnier with chandeliers
The main chandelier weighs about 8 tonnes and has 340 lights. In Leroux’s novel, it falls on an audience member. In reality, a counterweight did fall in 1896, killing a concierge. The chandelier itself has never fallen — though the Phantom myth persists.

Arsène Lupin at the Opera: The Immersive Game

This is a different kind of Opera Garnier visit — an immersive detective game where you follow clues through the building while solving a mystery involving the fictional gentleman thief Arsène Lupin. Think escape room meets guided tour meets literary treasure hunt. You’re given a case file and a set of puzzles, and you have to solve them while exploring rooms that regular visitors don’t always access.

Baroque interior of Palais Garnier with chandeliers and ornate ceilings
The game takes you through the backstage areas, the upper galleries, and some of the ornate salons that the standard self-guided tour skips. You’re solving puzzles while surrounded by one of the most beautiful buildings in Europe — it’s hard to concentrate on the clues when the ceiling looks like that.

At $32, it’s the most expensive option on this page, and the 4.0 rating is solid but not spectacular. The main variable is how much you enjoy puzzle games — if you love escape rooms, this is phenomenal. If puzzles frustrate you, the standard self-guided tour is the better choice. It works best with 2-4 people and takes about 90 minutes.

The opulent interior of Palais Garnier in Paris showcasing grand architecture
Even if you don’t finish the puzzles, you’ve just spent 90 minutes exploring the Opera Garnier with a purpose. Most visitors wander through in 30 minutes and leave. The game forces you to look closely at details you’d otherwise miss — mouldings, inscriptions, hidden symbols.

Best Tickets to Book

1. Grand Rex Studio Tour — $14

Grand Rex Studio Tour behind the scenes
At $14, this is one of the cheapest ticketed experiences in Paris. The quality-to-price ratio is absurd — you’d pay more for a bad coffee near the Eiffel Tower.

The headliner and the reason most people end up on this page. Fifty minutes of behind-the-scenes cinema magic in one of Europe’s most beautiful Art Deco buildings. The interactive elements keep it from feeling like a museum, and the $14 price tag makes it an impulse buy. Our review covers each section of the tour and rates the experience for both adults and kids — the consensus is that it exceeds expectations across the board.

2. Opera Garnier Entry Ticket — $18

Opera Garnier self-guided tour interior
Sixteen thousand reviews at 4.6 stars. The Opera Garnier is one of Paris’s most consistently praised attractions, and the entry ticket is one of the best deals in a city that charges €17+ for most major museums.

If the Grand Rex shows you how cinema works, the Opera Garnier shows you why spectacle matters. The building is its own performance — every surface decorated, every detail considered. At $18 for self-guided access, it’s a steal considering you’re walking through what many architects consider the finest theatre building in the world. Our review covers the route, the Chagall ceiling, and whether the audio guide is worth the extra cost.

3. Arsène Lupin at the Opera — $32

Arsene Lupin immersive experience at Opera Garnier
Not a tour — a game. You’re solving a mystery inside one of the world’s most beautiful buildings. It’s the kind of experience that makes you feel smarter than you are, which is the best kind.

For Lupin fans, puzzle enthusiasts, or anyone who’s done the standard Opera Garnier tour and wants to go deeper. The immersive format means you explore at your own pace while following a narrative — it’s more engaging than a traditional audio guide and covers areas that standard visitors don’t see. Our review assesses the puzzle difficulty and whether non-French speakers can fully enjoy it (short answer: yes, it’s available in English).

Why These Venues Matter

Paris has always understood that spectacle is an art form. The Grand Rex and the Opera Garnier represent two different eras of that understanding — the 19th century opera house built to display wealth and culture, and the 20th century cinema palace built to democratise entertainment. Both buildings were designed to make the audience feel something before the performance even started. That philosophy of architectural generosity is rare in modern construction, which is what makes visiting them feel special.

Empty theater with red-trimmed seats for film screenings
Modern cinemas are designed for efficiency — maximum seats, minimum square footage, neutral decor. The Grand Rex was designed for emotion. Every surface is decorated because the architects believed that the environment should prepare you to feel something. Walking in is the first act.

The behind-the-scenes tours at both venues reveal something that front-of-house visitors miss: the sheer complexity of making these buildings work. The Grand Rex’s projection booth is a working studio. The Opera Garnier’s backstage is a small city — workshops, rehearsal rooms, storage for thousands of costumes. The buildings are performers themselves, with technical systems as complex as any production they host.

People seated watching a movie on a large cinema screen
Seeing a film at the Grand Rex connects you to over 90 years of Parisian cinema history. Every major French film has premiered on this screen. Harry Potter midnight screenings drew queues that wrapped around the block. The building turns any film into an event.
The opulent interior of Palais Garnier in Paris showcasing grand architecture
The Opera Garnier was designed to be the centre of Parisian cultural life — and for decades it was. Napoleon III commissioned it as a symbol of imperial ambition. The building outlasted the empire. It outlasted two world wars. It will probably outlast us all.

Practical Tips

Grand Rex location: 1 Boulevard Poissonnière, 2nd arrondissement. Métro: Bonne Nouvelle (Lines 8 and 9). The boulevard is a wide Haussmann-era street with good restaurants and the kind of urban energy that central Paris sometimes lacks.

Opera Garnier location: Place de l’Opéra, 9th arrondissement. Métro: Opéra (Lines 3, 7, and 8). The square outside is one of Paris’s great public spaces — the building dominates it from every angle.

Luxurious Paris theater interior with ornate gold details and chandelier
Both venues are best visited on weekday mornings when the crowds are thin. The Grand Rex tour is self-paced so crowd levels matter less, but the Opera Garnier gets packed by midday on weekends — you’ll struggle to get a clean photo of the staircase after 11am.
Baroque interior of Palais Garnier with chandeliers and ornate ceilings
The Opera Garnier is at its most magical in the late morning when natural light streams through the upper windows and mixes with the electric chandeliers. The gold leaf catches both sources differently, creating a warmth that photographs can’t fully capture. Go before noon for the best light.

Combining visits: The Grand Rex and Opera Garnier are about a 15-minute walk apart. You can easily do both in a morning — Grand Rex first (open from 10am), then walk to the Opera (open from 10am, but better at 11am when the light is strongest through the windows). Grab lunch near Opéra and you’ve had a morning of Paris’s most beautiful interiors for under $35.

Christmas at the Grand Rex: Every December, the Grand Rex hosts “La Féerie des Eaux” — a Christmas spectacular that uses water screens, fountains, and special effects inside the main auditorium. It’s been running since 1954 and is a Parisian tradition. If you’re visiting in December, book early — it sells out.

Modern empty cinema with rows of wooden seats and blank screen
The Grand Rex also has smaller screening rooms for regular films. If the main auditorium isn’t playing something that interests you, the smaller rooms are still nicer than most cinemas — and the popcorn is French.

More Paris Entertainment Experiences

If behind-the-scenes Paris is your thing, the quirky museums guide covers the Atelier des Lumières and other immersive experiences that blend art and technology. The night and ghost tours show you the dramatic side of Paris after dark. And for another iconic venue, the Notre Dame Cathedral is back open and offers its own kind of architectural spectacle — though without the special effects budget. If you enjoy the behind-the-scenes angle, the Stade de France stadium tour applies the same concept to sports — locker rooms, pitch access, and the stories behind France’s biggest sporting venue.