
Ignacio Agüero, Cien niños esperando un tren (One Hundred Children Waiting for a Train), 1988, film
Held on 07, 14 Jun 2026
The final session in this Moon Projector season contemplates the feeling around the first experience of cinema — cinema as revelation, magic, fantasy and mystery from the first gaze, from the first contact with the medium, and imagery etched on the retina of childhood. The programme shows Émile Cohl’s landmark Fantasmagorie (1908), the first ever hand-drawn animation, and Ignacio Agüero’s Cien niños esperando un tren (One Hundred Children Waiting for a Train, 1988), a feature-length film on play and the origins of cinema.
Fantasmagorie (1908)by Émile Cohl (Paris, 1857– Villejuif, 1938) is the first expression in the history of animated drawing. Émile Cohl was an illustrator who belonged to the Parisian art group Arts incohérents (1882–1895), who was bestowed with an absurdist and pre-Surrealist talent. Whereas the Lumière brothers were able get audiences out of their seats as they witnessed a train moving towards them in 1895, Fantasmagorie is a supernatural experience, akin to an apparition yet also innocuous and entertaining — the inanimate comes to life out of nothing and figures seemingly move with little sense. From the outset, animation was related to caricature, fabulation and the comical, a sweet spot for the dreams of the youngest audience.
From the discovery of new imagery arising from the animated line to knowledge of the world through a screen, Cien niños esperando un tren (1988), by Chilean director Ignacio Agüero (Santiago, 1952), narrates a group of young people’s discovery of cinema in a workshop on the origins of the medium in a poverty-stricken town on the outskirts of Santiago de Chile. Play, fun and learning combine with a fascination with images, as viewing Émile Cohl’s Fantasmagorie (1908) in the workshop becomes an act of freedom.
Programme
Organised by
Museo Reina Sofía
Accessible activity
This activity has two spaces reserved for people with reduced mobility
Agenda
domingo 07 jun 2026 a las 12:00
First session
Émile Cohl. Fantasmagorie
France, 1908, DCP, black and white, silent short film with music, 1’45’’
The first moving drawing in the history of animation. Through the continuity of frames, the main character, a small clown, encounters objects that magically transform.
Ignacio Agüero. Cien niños esperando un tren (One Hundred Children Waiting for a Train)
Chile,1988, DCP, colour, sound, original version in Spanish, 55’
Alicia Vega, a teacher, runs a film workshop in a primary school in the impoverished town of Lo Hermida, on the outskirts of Santiago de Chile. In the workshop young people encounter cinema in its earliest expression with the screening of the first animation story, Fantasmagorie, an essential work that shows the power of cinema to create knowledge, memory and identity.
domingo 14 jun 2026 a las 12:00
Second session
Émile Cohl. Fantasmagorie
France, 1908, DCP, black and white, silent short film with music, 1’45’’
Ignacio Agüero. Cien niños esperando un tren (One Hundred Children Waiting for a Train)
Chile,1988, DCP, colour, sound, original version in Spanish, 55’


Activity within the program...
Moon Projector
Moon Projector is the Museo Reina Sofía’s regular film programme for young audiences. Every Sunday morning, sessions are held to introduce children to cinema and audiovisual arts, taking them on a journey of fascination, where imagination and knowledge abound, from the dawn of film language to today’s most creative and original works with future generations in mind.
The programme title draws from the work of poet Federico García Lorca, a Moon Projector where dreams and early imagination reverberate, and where children’s fantasy emerges from the contemplation of projected light.
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Cinema, for the First Time
Past activity
The final session in this Moon Projector season contemplates the feeling around the first experience of cinema — cinema as revelation, magic, fantasy and mystery from the first gaze, from the first contact with the medium, and imagery etched on the retina of childhood. The programme shows Émile Cohl’s landmark Fantasmagorie (1908), the first ever hand-drawn animation, and Ignacio Agüero’s Cien niños esperando un tren (One Hundred Children Waiting for a Train, 1988), a feature-length film on play and the origins of cinema.
Fantasmagorie (1908)by Émile Cohl (Paris, 1857– Villejuif, 1938) is the first expression in the history of animated drawing. Émile Cohl was an illustrator who belonged to the Parisian art group Arts incohérents (1882–1895), who was bestowed with an absurdist and pre-Surrealist talent. Whereas the Lumière brothers were able get audiences out of their seats as they witnessed a train moving towards them in 1895, Fantasmagorie is a supernatural experience, akin to an apparition yet also innocuous and entertaining — the inanimate comes to life out of nothing and figures seemingly move with little sense. From the outset, animation was related to caricature, fabulation and the comical, a sweet spot for the dreams of the youngest audience.
From the discovery of new imagery arising from the animated line to knowledge of the world through a screen, Cien niños esperando un tren (1988), by Chilean director Ignacio Agüero (Santiago, 1952), narrates a group of young people’s discovery of cinema in a workshop on the origins of the medium in a poverty-stricken town on the outskirts of Santiago de Chile. Play, fun and learning combine with a fascination with images, as viewing Émile Cohl’s Fantasmagorie (1908) in the workshop becomes an act of freedom.

Karel Zeman’s Dream
Past activity
Moon Projector returns in 2026 with the grandmaster of Czech animation, Karel Zeman (Ostroměř, 1910 – Prague, 1989), an iconic film-maker in the history of fantasy cinema.
The visual world of Karel Zeman encompasses an array of influences, from the imagery of Jules Verne and his provocative vision of the future to the dream-like, romantic aesthetic of illustrator Gustave Doré — palpable in Zeman’s scenes with an Orientalist and exotic flavour — not to mention the creative solutions of Georges Méliès. Zeman’s imagination led him not only to invent but also construct from a craftsman’s resources, and from this world came creations of identity such as the short film Inspiration (1948) and his first feature-length film King Lavra (1950), establishing him as a probing, revolutionary artist. From his first productions with puppets and the use of stop-motion, his style would evolve with the use of animated drawing and his interaction with classical fiction. Works such as The Treasure of Bird Island (1952), Journey to the Beginning of Time (1955), The Fabulous Baron (1961), The Stolen Airship (1967) and his final feature film The Tale of John and Mary (1980) combine to make Karel Zeman one of the twentieth century’s most relevant film artists. Such a legacy is discernible in the work of numerous directors — the creatures of Ray Harryhaussen, the puppets of Tadanari Okamoto, childhood as a free space in the work of Hayao Miyazaki, the animated illustrations of Terry Gilliam, the fantasy of Tim Burton and even the offbeat world of Wes Anderson.

Beyond the Wall… The Beach!
Past activity
In a war, where does hope live? Beyond the Wall… The Beach! envisions a better world through the eyes of children in Palestine. A vision which is explored in this programme via a selection of films — fiction and animation — from this war-torn country. From an adult’s point of view, war is justified on political and moral grounds. Through a child’s eyes, however, any logic of war’s brutality is demolished and their perspective shows the tragedy of war as a mistake without justification. Faced with adult destruction, children reaffirm life in its fullness.
The line-up of film-makers of Palestinian origin to feature here — Ibrahim Handal, Tariq Rimawi, Firas Khoury, Rami Abbas, Nisreen Yaseen and Haneen Koraz — are a case in point. Ibrahim Handal stands as one of the emerging voices among young Palestinian film-makers, his practice focusing on daily life, identity and resistance with a body of work which, although rooted in reality, plays with creative documentary and fiction. Firas Khoury, meanwhile, is a renowned Palestinian director whose work has come to express what normal life would be like for children in Palestine, showing the reality facing any child. Both film-makers remove the veil of prejudice as they make the life of Palestinian children equal to the life of children in any peaceful country.
The introduction to the series features Rami Abbas, a Palestinian-born film-maker who studied in Syria and currently lives in Madrid. His work is a further example of diaspora and of memory and resistance. Hide & Seek (2024) reflects this side of exodus and, in relation to this experience, protection of the most vulnerable.
Nisreen Yaseen, for her part, imparts a vision of the transition from childhood to adolescence, in which the noise of war is dissolved, while Tariq Rimawi’s award-winning animated short film Zoo (2022) is an aesthetic work of profound symbolic importance which expounds the opposition between oppression and freedom.
Finally, Haneen Koraz, who has made her entire body of work from refugee camps on the Gaza Strip, giving voice, through animation workshops, to minors, mothers and families. A Day in the Tent (2024) is a filmic show of resilience and truth that allows the Gaza people to tell the world what it means to live under bombs. Only through a child’s eye, and drawings, can this reality without prejudice be shown.

They Came from the East. Cosmonauts from the Other Side
Past activity
Moon Projector is the Museo Reina Sofía’s regular film programme for young audiences. Every Sunday morning, sessions are held to introduce children to cinema and audiovisual arts, taking them on a journey of fascination, where imagination and knowledge abound, from the dawn of film language to today’s most creative and original works with future generations in mind. The programme title draws from the work of poet Federico García Lorca, a Moon Projector where dreams and early imagination reverberate, and where children’s fantasy emerges from the contemplation of projected light.
They Came from the East. Cosmonauts from the Other Side surfaces from an admiration of Iron Curtain film-makers and their brilliant visions. An indispensable ensemble of animation schools which were the inspiration for other radical, innovative productions, for instance René Laloux’s La planète sauvage (Fantastic Planet, 1973), George Dunning’s Yellow Submarine (1968) and Hayao Miyazaki’s Sen to Chihiro no Kamikakushi (Spirited Away, 2001). The creations that emerged in those Cold War years are a demonstration of how imagination and fantasy resided on the other side of the Berlin Wall — the unique way they approached science-fiction and stories of the future were a dream for children who looked up at the stars and thought of space ships and beings from other planets, but with the big difference that they dreamed of being cosmonauts, not astronauts.
Pannonia Film Studio (1951–2015), in Hungary, and Zagreb Film (1953–present), in the former Yugoslavia, were two of the major architects of these films and to whom this session is devoted. With their personal and inventive imagery, both schools endowed their creations with the avant-garde and with psychedelic forms. Their simple graphic style and minimal backgrounds, particularly those from the former Yugoslavia, would impact heavily on comic strips. By breaking naturalism and introducing an artistic and free style to these films, they exemplified a creative diversity that was unmatched. The greyness of this Europe formed the backdrop to the emergence of brilliant artists like Hungarian film-makers Gyula Macskássy, regarded as the father of Hungarian animation, the lyrical director and screenwriter Katalin Macskássy, the master of thought-provoking and psychedelic images, Sándor Reisenbüchler, and Tibor Hernádi, with his simple lines and minimalist scenes, who featured in Moon Projector #4. Not to mention the Croatian artist Zlatko Grgić, with his stripped-back drawings and irreverent humour, and the sarcasm and absurd situations of Dušan Vukotić. A constellation of film-makers who made animation differently, demonstrating the power of imagination without borders, neither in this world nor in outer space.

Dancing Forms
Past activity
Moon Projector is the Museo Reina Sofía’s regular film programme for young audiences. Every Sunday morning, sessions are held to introduce children to cinema and audiovisual arts, taking them on a journey of fascination, where imagination and knowledge abound, from the dawn of film language to today’s most creative and original works with future generations in mind. The programme title draws from the work of poet Federico García Lorca, a Moon Projector where dreams and early imagination reverberate, and where children’s fantasy emerges from the contemplation of projected light.
Dancing Forms takes us into the genesis of animation, into the fascinating worlds of early footage of moving forms and colour in film. These principles denoted the first filmic experience of animated cinema, in this case through the basic forms of art that inspired experimental creation, as well as an approach to primitive imagery. This visual and sound experience seeks to explore the sensory world of child contemplation — a journey of forms, colours, sound and different music which spark children’s curious gaze. A new world without identity figures or predictable narratives, where the youngest children can directly experience moving forms and colours.
The artists and film-makers who accompany us on this voyage include some of the pioneers from the historical avant-garde and key artists in the mid-twentieth century. The session is structured around Oskar Fischinger (Germany,1900 – USA,1967), one of the grand masters of animation by way of the experimental montage of sounds and images; Len Lye (New Zealand, 1901 – USA, 1980), a reference point in experimental animation in the first half of the twentieth century via the innovative fusion of sounds, such as Latin rhythms, mambo and swing, and abstract forms; Mary Ellen Bute (USA,1906–1983), one of the first women experimental film-makers with a work which pivots around synaesthesia, music turned into images; Norman McLaren (Scotland, 1914 – Canada, 1987), undoubtedly one of the most relevant artists in the creation of graphic-sound animations; and finally Faith Hubley (New York, 1924–2001), an artist behind evocative abstract films that evolved from primitive forms to narrative figuration.

René Laloux and Mœbius. The Time Masters
Past activity
Les Maîtres du temps (The Time Masters) is the second feature-length film by the master of fantastical animation, René Laloux (Paris, 1929 – Angoulême, 2004), on this occasion with the collaboration of the great illustrator and cartoonist Jean Giraud (Nogent-sur-Marne, 1938 – Paris, 2012), known internationally as Mœbius. Laloux and Mœbius, along with esteemed Hungarian film-maker Tibor Hernádi (Budapest, 1947–2012) as animation director, made one of the most iconic works in sci-fi animation, despite its relative obscurity for many audiences. The story is based on the novel L'Orphelin de Perdide (1958) by French writer Stefan Wul, a source of creative inspiration for the metaphysical world of René Laloux.
The film, suitable for all ages, recreates the unique atmosphere of Mœbius’s graphic world and Laloux’s philosophical script, which manages to reach the youngest audiences via Piel, a roaming boy marooned on the planet of Perdide. With a comic-book graphic style and psychodelia, fantastical spaceships, cosmic landscapes, robot-humanoids and galactic beings all appear on screen to Mœbius’s unmistakeable aesthetic. The rescue of young Piel, by picking up a transmitter call from the adventurer Jaffar, takes us on a journey into a surreal and hypnotic future world with a seemingly linear narration. The film is a fantastical voyage into the meaning of childhood and the passage of time.

The Stories of Lotte Reiniger 2
Past activity
Moon Projector is the Museo Reina Sofía’s regular film programme for young audiences. Every Sunday morning, sessions are held to introduce children to cinema and audiovisual arts, taking them on a journey of fascination, where imagination and knowledge abound, from the dawn of film language to today’s most creative and original works with future generations in mind. The programme title draws from the work of poet Federico García Lorca, a Moon Projector where dreams and early imagination reverberate, and where children’s fantasy emerges from the contemplation of projected light.
Following a showing of The Adventures of Prince Achmed, the oldest feature-length animation film preserved, this edition of Moon Projector shows some of the animated short films Lotte Reiniger made with inspiration from European tradition: the Brothers Grimm’s Cinderella and Hansel and Gretel, Hans Christian Andersen’s Thumbelina and Jeanne-Marie Leprince de Beaumont’s The Three Wishes. Under the wing of the German film-maker, this children’s literary heritage, which germinated in Romanticism, takes on a new aesthetic and artistic meaning, her unique style of frame-by-frame silhouettes evolving in this ensemble of past animations with an original stage design and a new narrative rhythm from entertaining artistic expressions and musical pieces.
Lotte Reiniger (Germany, 1899–1981) is regarded as the pioneer of animation film. Inspired by the films of Georges Méliès, German Expressionism and pre-cinema inventions, Reiniger conceived of her own universe based on storytelling tradition, the genesis of narrative animation.
Pivotally, one aspect of the film-maker’s work was the prolific creation of animation films based on European cultural heritage, where she gathered the tales of the continent’s great fable storytellers. The majority of these animated black-and-white pieces were made for the BBC in the UK, where Reiniger lived from 1949 onwards after fleeing the spread of Nazism in Germany and following spells in different European countries.

Colours!
Past activity
Colours! is the second instalment of the children’s film series Moon Projector, screening, under a conceptual chromatic arc, short animation and documentary films for all ages. This session shines a light on film-makers from a range of time periods, for example Iranian director Abbas Kiarostami; more contemporary figures like French artist and film-maker Alain Biet; young animation directors such as German artist Franka Sachse, Lithuanian director Ignas Meilunas; and Swiss illustrator and animator Oona Lacroix. Congregated here, they form an all-encompassing, colour-based experience from knowledge, plays with light, graphic stories, illustration and humour.
Rangha (The Colours) is a short film Kiarostami made for the Institute for the Intellectual Development of Children and Young Adults — known as Kanoon, and highly active in the 1960s and 1970s in Iran — which explores the theme of colour from an educational vision and its manifestation in the everyday of childhood. A knowledge-based aesthetic representation with echoes of daily life. Alain Biet’s Grands Canons (Perfect Copies) is a symphony of paper illustrations of daily objects which come to life with plays of colour. In Saka sy Vorona (Cat and Bird), Franka Sachse seems to make colours disappear, despite only using one: on a white background the silhouette of a black cat appears and discovers a small white bird emerging from the darkness, an encounter that creates a play of possible forms and silhouettes. In Mr. Night Has a Day Off, Mister Night is in charge of day becoming night, but one fine day he decides to visit the city in the morning, much to his dismay. Drawing from a simple idea and a fun character, animator Ignas Meilunas reveals the secret of colours to us: light. Finally, in Coucouleurs, Oona Lacroix recounts the lives of different birds that nest in trees sharing their same colour. But what happens when a bird has more than one colour?

The Stories of Lotte Reiniger
Past activity
Moon Projector is the Museo Reina Sofía’s regular film programme for young audiences. Every Sunday morning, sessions are held to introduce children to cinema and audiovisual arts, taking them on a journey of fascination, where imagination and knowledge abound, from the dawn of film language to today ’s most creative and original works with future generations in mind. The programme title draws from the work of poet Federico García Lorca, a Moon Projector where dreams and early imagination reverberate, and where children’s fantasy emerges from the contemplation of projected light.
This inaugural session takes us back to the beginning. The Adventures of Prince Achmed is the first ever feature-length animation film, made using the silhouette animation technique and shadow puppetry, and tells a story from One Thousand and One Nights. Achmed, his father the Caliph, his sister Dinarsade and an evil sorcerer are the characters in this first great story. The young prince objects to his sister being handed over to a treacherous sorcerer who has put a price on a magic flying horse. In his eagerness, the prince is deceived by the wizard, who makes him mount the horse, taking him to an unknown and faraway place. The film reveals, for the first time, colour and forms in a fantastical story — an aesthetic explosion with the capacity for unique and dreamy fascination.
Lotte Reiniger (Germany, 1899–1981) is regarded as the pioneer of animation film. Inspired by the films of Georges Méliès, German Expressionism and pre-cinema inventions, Reiniger conceived of her own universe based on storytelling tradition, the genesis of narrative animation. Drawing from popular children’s puppetry theatre and shadow play, she built animated stories with silhouettes and shadows which would later evolve into experimentation with colour.
This screening unveils the Museo’s new cinema theatre, a renovated cinematic space, after a year of remodelling work, which holds a set Thursday-to-Sunday programme with an array of audiences and gazes in mind.
Más actividades
![Céline Sciamma, Naissance des pieuvres [Lirios de agua], 2007, película](https://recursos.museoreinasofia.es/styles/small_landscape/public/Actividades/ciclocine-piscinas-3.jpg.webp)
Céline Sciamma. Water Lilies
Friday, 10 July 2026
Céline Sciamma’s directorial debut, Naissance des pieuvres,depicts the emotional and sexual awakening of three teenagers around an indoor swimming pool in a Parisian suburb. Marie, a fifteen-year-old introvert, becomes fascinated by Floriane, the charismatic captain of a local synchronised swimming team. Driven by this attraction, Marie tries to get closer to her while observing the complex dynamics of desire, friendship and power that develops between the young girls. At the same time, Anne, one of Marie’s friends, has her own experience of insecurity and affective search, shaped by the pressure to fit in and belong. As the relationship between the three intensifies, contradictions surface between the image they outwardly project and their real feelings.
Standing away from the common places on adolescence, Céline Sciamma explores first love, burgeoning queer identity and the uncertainty of desire with an intimate, observational gaze, resulting in a sensitive and honest portrait of a time of transformation, in which each gesture leads to the passage from childhood to adulthood.

Sofia Coppola. Somewhere
Saturday, 11 July 2026
Johnny Marco (Stephen Dorff), a famous Hollywood actor, lives a life of pleasure in Hotel Chateau Marmont in Los Angeles, drifting aimlessly between vacuous relationships, punctuated by film shoots and commercial duties. Cleo (Elle Fanning), his eleven-year-old daughter, stays with him for a few weeks due to her mother’s absence, forcing him to rethink his life.
Sofia Coppola’s employment of swimming pools is carefully considered in the film — blue water in Somewhere is the only place where Marco can recover the meaning of his existence as the pool acts as a womb in which he finds balance. While living with his daughter Cleo and the reflection of these aquatic moments — diving under water, floating, playing or simply sunbathing with no real purpose — everything happens. Thus, Coppola explores in depth themes such as fame, loneliness and the complexity of human ties, putting forward an intimate and profound portrait full of the subtleties of life.

Jonathan Glazer. Sexy Beast
Friday, 17 July 2026
Gal Dove (Ray Winstone), a criminal for the British mafia, lives happily retired with his wife in an idyllic villa in southern Spain and a dazzling swimming pool. Their peace is shattered with the arrival of Don Logan (Ben Kingsley), a former gangster and criminal associate who wants to convince him to do one last job.
If a swimming pool can be at the heart of suspense, then Sexy Beast is the quintessence. The reflection of blue water in Gal’s idyllic seclusion symbolises the artificial paradise that can be broken at any time. This first feature-length film by British director Jonathan Glazer (also the director of The Zone of Interest, 2023) starts with one of the most striking swimming pool scenes, a symbol for the impending danger about to reach this whitewashed haven of peace. The perfect vision of recreated beauty — luxury pools on the Andalusian coast — which, in the depths of pristine water, conceals an unsettling fear of returning to the past.
![François Ozon, Swimming Pool [La piscina], 2003, película](https://recursos.museoreinasofia.es/styles/small_landscape/public/Actividades/ciclocine-piscinas-6.jpg.webp)
François Ozon. Swimming Pool
Saturday, 18 July 2026
Sarah Morton (Charlotte Rampling), a frustrated English writer paralysed by writer’s block, is invited by her editor to spend a few days in her summer house in the south of France. While there she meets Julie (Ludivine Sagnier), the editor’s uninhibited daughter. The young girl’s hypersexuality clashes with Morton’s cold nature, an initial hostility which turns into a fascination with the private life of the young girl, serving the writer as inspiration for her new novel and tugging the story to an ambiguous game between truth and imagination.
Being in crisis is wanting to be another person. Sarah wants to absorb the vitality of her young host, a process of metamorphosis triggered by the swimming pool. The pool is the film’s central character, the place where Julie shows her naked body and amorous acts, sending Sarah into a state of agitation. Through the pool and its water, the writer drinks in Julie’s wild passion. The aquatic enclosure thus acts as catharsis: the place where the subconscious of the writer flourishes, enabling her to unleash her creativity and free her fantasies. At the same time, water distorts the image, blurring fiction and reality; ultimately, the necessary medium to keep art afloat.
![Jean Vigo, Taris, ou la natation [Taris, rey del agua], 1931, película](https://recursos.museoreinasofia.es/styles/small_landscape/public/Actividades/ciclocine-piscinas-7.jpg.webp)
Leni Riefenstahl. Olympia, Part 2. Festival of Beauty and Jean Vigo. Taris, Swimming Champion
Friday, 24 July 2026
The body in water as an object of ideology. This is one of the major themes of the 1930s and this session, where Nazism and Anarchism dissolve into two different swimming pools. Two great films of counterposed ideologies which have gone down in history as examples of film’s power to represent a vision of the world. In Olympia, Part 2. Festival of Beauty, Leni Riefenstahl films the Olympic Games of Berlin in 1936, organised during the Third Reich. The camera leaves the athletics stadium to show the repertoire of modern sports — fencing, polo, cycling, pentathlon — before culminating in the Olympic pool with Adolf Hitler as the host, where the beautiful, disciplined, classical bodies of the swimmers bring to mind, as Susan Sontag wrote, the visual fascination that characterised fascism. Meanwhile, Jean Vigo, the son of an exiled Spanish anarchist, films French Olympic champion Jean Taris in a funny, playful exercise, where the swimming pool becomes a field of play without rules and where avant-garde film-making elements of the 1930s materialise, such as slow motion, superimposed images and dynamic editing. Two avant-garde films, two films on opposite poles that show, for a time, swimming not as an object of pleasure or desire, but as a space of contest from which to demonstrate the power of the twentieth century’s great ideologies.