đčWhat's on in Madrid: April 24
Tardeos are the perfect excuse for day drinking so make sure you don't miss out.

Madrid | Issue #142
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Here Are 5 Things to Do in Madrid This Weekend
Itâs Friday again!
And itâs time to put your phone away. Weâre having a very cultural weekend that involves silent films, book clubs, and street art. So gather your monocles and mount your penny-farthings, and make haste to the picture house for an evening of most agreeable diversion!
Happy weekend đ§
1. đŹ The Passion of Joan of Arc: Silent film, a live orchestra, and emotional damage
If your idea of cinema is The Fast and the Furious saga, caramel popcorn, and looking at your phone every five minutes, this might not be your scene. But if youâre ready for something a bit more intellectual intense, then you donât want to miss this.
The Passion of Joan of Arc â yes, that French silent film from 1928 you never heard of before â lands in Madrid tomorrow for a one-time-only screening that goes all in.
Pay attention. Weâre talking live orchestra, live choir, and a full immersive setup inside Cine Capitol that turns the film into something closer to a mesmerizing ritual.
And the film itself? Not exactly light viewing. Widely considered one of the greatest movies ever made, this masterpiece by Danish director Carl Theodor Dreyer strips everything down to raw emotion.
It follows Joan of Arcâs trial and execution through a series of brutal close-ups. No distractions, no spectacle, just the face of Maria Falconetti carrying the entire weight of the story. Itâs uncomfortable and weirdly modern for something thatâs almost 100 years old.
Weâre not done. Now add a live score.
The Caspervek Ensemble performs an original composition (Missa Ioanna Arcensis), backed by orchestra and choir, which basically means the emotional impact goes from âintenseâ to âwhy am I crying on a Saturday afternoon.â
This is so much more than watching a film. Definitely memorable.
đ„ïž What: La pasiĂłn de Juana de Arco (with live orchestra & choir)
đ Where: Cine Capitol, Gran VĂa 41, Madrid
đ When: April 25, 12:30 p.m.
đ Tickets start at âŹ24
2. đš Malasaña becomes a live canvas again, and yes, you get to judge it

A long, long time ago (like, in 2010), Malasaña was all graffiti, which meant it was gross. Sixteen years later, the neighborhood has changed: itâs now all graffiti, which means itâs great! Itâs gone from âplace for gang members to hang outâ to âopen air art projectâ. And this Sunday, weâre all celebrating the rebranding.
Pinta Malasaña is back, and the neighborhood is once again turning into Madridâs street gallery, with artists literally taking over shop shutters, walls, and whatever space locals are brave enough to offer.
Dozens of urban artists will be painting live across the streets for one day only, all at the same time. Forget those snobbish art galleries and Instagram filters. This is all about spray cans, ladders, and a crowd watching the whole thing unfold in real time.
The concept is simple but great: local businesses, neighbors, and associations lend their spaces, and artists compete to transform them. You walk around, watch the process, and by the end of the day⊠you actually get a say. Because yes, thereâs a public vote for the best piece, so your uneducated opinion about art finally matters! No more staring at a banana duct-taped to a white canvas. This is real art!
Beyond the painting, the vibe is very Malasaña: workshops, side activities, people wandering around with beers pretending they understand street art. Itâs one of those plans where you show up, walk around, and end up spending all day there.
đ„ïž What: Pinta Malasaña
đ Where: All over Malasaña, Madrid
đ When: April 26
đ Tickets: No tickets necessary
3. đ Books are taking over Madrid, and itâs getting out of hand (in a good way)
If you thought âLa Noche de los Librosâ was already a lot, welcome to the upgraded version. This year, Madrid has decided one night isnât enough and turned it into a full-blown four-day literary takeover called LIBROMAD.
The entire region basically becomes one giant book club this week â except instead of pretending you read Truman Capote, you get 400+ activities, 300 authors, and events happening across 100 municipalities.
The theme this year is âLos confines de los libros,â which sounds boring but really means that books arenât just books anymore. Theyâre conversations, performances, concerts, workshops, and whatever else happens, especially now that no one reads anymore.
Libraries and bookstores become the main stage. This is reading as a social experience â something that crosses generations, mixes formats, and turns into a collective event.
Sundayâs closing event at Plaza de España is doing the most, if you need a starting point. Thereâs a collective reading (with hot chocolate, because Madrid knows what matters), live music, performances, and even a mini book fair.
đ„ïž What: LIBROMAD - Madrid Book Week
đ Where: All over Madrid (main event at Plaza de España)
đ When: Through April 26
đ Tickets: Free entry to most activities
4. đ Feeling lost? Imperio is a theatre piece that turns identity into a journey
Feeling a bit lost in life, but youâre poor, so you canât go to Bali to find yourself and eat, pray, and love? Great. Weâre offering a play that is basically a similar existential crisis⊠but with better lighting and choreography (sorry, but itâs true).
Carles FernĂĄndez Giuaâs latest piece lands in Madrid with a mix of theatre and dance that tries to answer one of those annoying questions we all avoid: what actually gives your life meaning, and why is it so hard to
adultfigure out?The show follows two journeys at the same time. One is physical: an artistic company traveling through China and Tibet. The other is way more personal: Yan Huang, a performer who left China and now, from Europe, is trying to reconnect with a culture she somehow understands better from afar than when she was actually living there. Pretty on brand for us, isnât it?
The whole piece plays with that idea â distance giving clarity, identity being something you rebuild rather than inherit, and the strange feeling of not fully belonging anywhere.
It mixes documentary footage, movement, and poetic storytelling to create something thatâs less about plot and more about⊠vibes (intellectual vibes, donât worry).
If youâre in the mood to feel something slightly deeper than usual (or just want to say you went to something cultured this weekend), this might be your move.
đ„ïž What: Imperio
đ Where: Centro Cultural Conde Duque, Calle del Conde Duque 11, Madrid
đ When: April 24â25
đ Tickets start at âŹ20
5. đŒïž Colores y Formas: Abstract art that you can actually take home




