Radiohead Fan Experience in Brooklyn
- Radiohead’s “Motion Picture House featuring KID A MNESIA” opened at Brooklyn’s Agger Fish Building on May 6 and is running during the week of May 18-24. - The official site says each visit includes a 75-minute film inside a larger installation, with Brooklyn tickets priced at $72.43 before tax. - Timed sessions in Brooklyn continue through June 28, with tickets and screening information listed through AXS and the project’s official site.
Radiohead’s “Motion Picture House featuring KID A MNESIA” is now running in Brooklyn at the Agger Fish Building, giving New York fans a physical version of the band’s “Kid A” and “Amnesiac” visual world. The installation opened on May 6 and is scheduled to stay in the borough through June 28, according to the project’s official site. Time Out New York included the event in its May 18-24 list of things to do in the city this week, describing it as a Radiohead fan experience in Brooklyn. The project is not a concert. The official site says the visit centers on a 75-minute film inside a large-scale audiovisual installation and art gallery built around “KID A MNESIA,” the band’s earlier virtual exhibition. The material draws from artwork created by Thom Yorke and Stanley Donwood during the “Kid A” and “Amnesiac” recording sessions. ### Where in Brooklyn is the experience taking place? The Agger Fish Building at the Brooklyn Navy Yard is the New York home of the installation. Time Out reported on May 15 that the show had opened there as a limited-run attraction, taking over part of the industrial waterfront. The official project site lists Brooklyn as the first stop on a wider tour. It says the installation will move to Chicago from July 30 to August 23, then to Mexico City from October 27 to November 15, before arriving in San Francisco from January 14 to February 7, 2027. ### What do visitors actually get with a ticket? Each booking is sold in a two-hour slot, according to the official site. That window includes the 75-minute film and additional time to move through the gallery spaces. The soundtrack uses new mixes built from the “Kid A” and “Amnesiac” multitracks and is presented in 6-point surround sound, the site says. Time Out reported that the Brooklyn version includes large-scale artwork by Yorke and Donwood, projected visuals, distorted architecture and gallery spaces built around the albums’ imagery. The official FAQ says the event is all ages and that seating is not reserved. Visitors can stand or sit on the cushioned floor on a first-come, first-served basis. ### Is this the same thing that appeared at Coachella? The Brooklyn installation follows an earlier version shown at Coachella this spring. Time Out reported that the project first debuted in an underground bunker at the festival before coming to New York for what it described as the longest North American run. The official site says the Brooklyn installation is not exactly the same as the Coachella bunker, though both versions feature a movie and art inspired by “KID A MNESIA.” That distinction matters for fans who saw early images from California and are trying to gauge whether the New York stop is a repeat. ### How much does it cost, and how are tickets being sold? Brooklyn tickets are listed at $72.43 before local tax on the official site. The same FAQ says all tickets must be purchased in advance and that only a limited number are available for each screening. AXS lists Brooklyn dates on May 21, May 22, May 23 and May 24, with additional dates extending into June. Time Out reported that tickets were being sold in timed slots from Thursday through Sunday and said organizers were using Fair AXS ticketing to limit bots and scalpers. ### Are there any other details fans should know before going? The official site says Radiohead will not be performing. Merchandise is available for ticket holders at the venue, according to the FAQ. The Brooklyn run continues through June 28, and the next listed stops are Chicago, Mexico City and San Francisco. Ticket links and screening details for Brooklyn are available through AXS and the project’s official site, while Time Out’s May 18-24 city guide includes the event among this week’s New York listings.