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    Bar in New York City, United States

    Metrograph

    100Pearl Points

    Film first, drinks second. Book ahead.

    Metrograph, Bar in New York City

    About Metrograph

    Metrograph on Ludlow Street is an independent cinema with a serious bar attached — best suited to pairs or small groups with a film in mind. The crowd is downtown creative and intentional rather than loud. Book film tickets in advance; bar walk-ins are generally easy on weeknights. Not the right room for large groups or a big night out.

    Metrograph, New York City: Pearl Verdict

    Metrograph on Ludlow Street is a rare combination of independent cinema, bar, and restaurant in one compact Lower East Side address. If you've already been once, the question is whether to go back for the film, the drinks, or both. For regulars, the answer is usually both — the programming and the bar operate on the same wavelength, and the crowd that shows up reflects that.

    What to Expect

    Metrograph draws a specific kind of New York regular: film-literate, downtown-leaning, not interested in posturing. This is not a scene in the nightlife sense. The crowd skews creative and knowledgeable without being loud about it. If your previous visit felt like stumbling into the right room at the right time, it will probably feel that way again. If you found it precious or self-conscious, that impression is unlikely to change.

    The bar and restaurant operate independently of the cinema schedule, meaning you can come for drinks without committing to a film. That said, the atmosphere is calibrated around the idea of cinema — the scent of the space carries the specific warmth of a working projection booth and aged wood, the kind of environment that signals intention without announcing it. For a second visit, consider arriving early enough to drink before a screening rather than after; the room has more energy during that window.

    Compared to the broader Lower East Side bar scene, Metrograph occupies a different register entirely. Superbueno a few blocks away is louder and more cocktail-forward. Amor y Amargo in the East Village is sharper and more specialist. Metrograph fits neither category, it's a bar that happens to screen great films, or a cinema that happens to have a serious bar, depending on which part of the experience you're there for.

    Who Fits Here

    Return visits work leading for pairs. The space is intimate, the programming is curated, and the bar doesn't lend itself to large groups running tabs. Two people with a shared interest in film will get more out of an evening here than a group of six looking for somewhere to land. For group outings in the Lower East Side, Superbueno or a reservation at a nearby restaurant will serve you better.

    Booking and Timing

    Film tickets should be booked in advance through Metrograph's website, popular repertory screenings and premieres sell out, particularly on weekends. The bar and restaurant are more accessible without a reservation, but weekends fill quickly. For a regular visit, a Wednesday or Thursday evening gives you the full atmosphere without the weekend crush. Walk-ins at the bar are generally possible on weeknights.

    Quick reference: 7 Ludlow St, Lower East Side. Film tickets: book ahead online. Bar: walk-in friendly on weeknights.

    FAQs

    What's the signature drink at Metrograph?

    • Metrograph's bar program is cinema-adjacent rather than cocktail-specialist, expect a focused menu of drinks that fits the room rather than a showpiece program. If cocktail precision is your priority, Attaboy NYC nearby offers a stronger drinks-forward experience. For bitters-led cocktails, Amor y Amargo is worth the short trip to the East Village. At Metrograph, the drink is secondary to the occasion.

    What's the crowd like at Metrograph?

    • Downtown creative, film-interested, and generally quieter than the surrounding Lower East Side bar scene. This is not a loud room. The crowd tends to arrive with purpose, either a specific screening or an intention to sit, drink, and talk. If you're looking for energy and volume, this is the wrong address. For a livelier crowd in the same neighbourhood, Superbueno is a better fit.

    Do I need a reservation at Metrograph?

    • For film screenings, yes, book through Metrograph's website in advance, especially for weekend or repertory events. For the bar and restaurant, walk-ins are possible on weeknights. Weekend evenings at the bar are busier; arriving before 7 PM gives you the leading chance of a seat without planning ahead. Booking difficulty overall is low compared to most serious bars in Manhattan.

    Is Metrograph good for groups?

    • Not particularly, for groups larger than three or four. The space is intimate and the programming format doesn't accommodate large parties well. For a group evening out in the Lower East Side, consider Superbueno instead, which handles larger tables more comfortably. Metrograph works well as a destination for two, or for a small group with a shared interest in what's screening.

    Does Metrograph have outdoor seating?

    • Metrograph is located at 7 Ludlow St in the Lower East Side. The venue is an indoor cinema and bar concept; outdoor seating is not a feature of the experience here. If an outdoor component matters to your evening, plan around this, New York's warmer months offer strong alternatives across the neighbourhood, and our full New York City bars guide covers options with outdoor space.

    Does Metrograph have happy hour deals?

    • Specific pricing and happy hour details are not confirmed in our current data. Check Metrograph's website directly for current offers before visiting. For comparison, Amor y Amargo in the East Village runs a focused aperitivo-style early evening service if a discounted drinks window is a priority for your plans.

    Explore More in New York City

    If Metrograph is on your list, these Pearl guides are worth bookmarking: our full New York City bars guide, restaurants guide, hotels guide, wineries guide, and experiences guide. Looking beyond New York? Bar Leather Apron in Honolulu, Jewel of the South in New Orleans, and Julep in Houston are worth knowing if your travels take you that direction. For a quiet, specialist drink closer to Metrograph's register, Angel's Share remains one of the most consistent low-key bars in Manhattan.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    What's the signature drink at Metrograph?

    Metrograph's bar program leans toward considered, low-fuss cocktails that fit a pre- or post-screening pace rather than a late-night scene. Specific menu details are not confirmed here, so check their current offering at the Ludlow Street address directly. For serious cocktail focus on the Lower East Side, Amor y Amargo is the sharper pick.

    What's the crowd like at Metrograph?

    Downtown, film-literate, and unpretentious. The people showing up at 7 Ludlow St are there for the programming first — repertory screenings, premieres, the occasional filmmaker Q&A; — not to be seen at a bar. It skews younger but not student-heavy, and the vibe is closer to a serious independent bookshop than a nightlife venue.

    Do I need a reservation at Metrograph?

    For films, yes — book tickets in advance through Metrograph's website, especially for weekend repertory screenings and premieres, which sell out. The bar and restaurant operate on a walk-in basis, but arriving without a film ticket and expecting a table on a busy Friday is a gamble. Plan around the screening schedule.

    Is Metrograph good for groups?

    Pairs are the format here. The space is compact and intimate, and the bar doesn't suit large tabs or loud coordination. Groups of more than four will find the experience harder to manage — if you want a downtown LES dinner for a group, Dirty French or Superbueno handle larger parties more naturally.

    Does Metrograph have outdoor seating?

    No outdoor seating is confirmed at the 7 Ludlow St location. Metrograph is an indoor venue built around its cinema and bar, and the Lower East Side block doesn't lend itself to a terrace format. Come for the inside experience or not at all.

    Does Metrograph have happy hour deals?

    No confirmed happy hour program is documented for Metrograph. The bar pricing aligns with a quality independent cinema-bar in Manhattan rather than a deals-driven neighborhood spot. If value-led drinking is the priority, The Long Island Bar in Brooklyn is a more straightforward option.

    Location

    7 Ludlow St, New York, NY 10002

    New York City, United States

    Compare Metrograph

    Comparing Metrograph to Alternatives
    VenueAwardsBooking Difficulty
    MetrographEasy
    The Long Island BarWorld's 50 BestUnknown
    Dirty FrenchUnknown
    SuperbuenoWorld's 50 BestUnknown
    Amor y AmargoWorld's 50 BestUnknown
    Angel's ShareWorld's 50 BestUnknown

    How Metrograph stacks up against the competition.

    Also Consider

    • The Long Island Bar, Notable alternative
    • Dirty French, Notable alternative
    • Superbueno, Notable alternative
    • Amor y Amargo, Notable alternative
    • Angel's Share, Notable alternative

    Within the Lower East Side and East Village bar scene, Metrograph occupies a narrower niche than most of its neighbours. The Long Island Bar in Brooklyn is the better call if you want a classic American bar room with serious cocktails and a more convivial atmosphere. It's more approachable for solo drinkers and easier to stay at for a long evening. Metrograph is a destination rather than a neighbourhood bar, which means the experience depends heavily on whether the programming aligns with your visit.

    Amor y Amargo is the right choice if the drink itself is the point, it's one of the most focused amaro and bitters bars in the city, and the staff know the product deeply. Metrograph doesn't compete on that level. Superbueno wins on energy and cocktail creativity for a group evening, and Dirty French is the call if you want a full sit-down dinner with serious wine in the same neighbourhood bracket. Metrograph is the right booking specifically when cinema plus drinks is the plan, not when either element is the sole priority.

    Angel's Share in the East Village is the closest comparison in terms of atmosphere register: quiet, intentional, and not designed for groups. Between the two, Angel's Share has a stronger dedicated cocktail program; Metrograph has the film programming as a differentiator. If you've done Angel's Share and want something with a different cultural layer attached, Metrograph is the logical next step. Booking difficulty at Metrograph is low for the bar; film tickets require more advance planning.

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