Yangon Movie Store Official
“I’m not nostalgic,” he says. “I’m practical. The store survived cyclones, military curfews, COVID. It will survive Netflix.” Yangon Movie Store isn’t just a place to rent films. It’s a living archive of Myanmar’s cinematic memory — from golden-age classics to banned underground reels. It’s a community hub where strangers argue over who is the better action star (Tony Jaa or Jet Li) and where an old man can still find the movie he fell in love to in 1985.
Somewhere off Pyay Road, look for the faded yellow sign and the sound of a 1990s Hong Kong fight scene playing on a small TV by the door. yangon movie store
Among the treasures: a 2007 documentary about the Saffron Revolution, shot on a handycam and burned to DVD; a 2012 horror film banned for its portrayal of monastery politics; and a collection of pre-1962 Burmese musicals. Ten years ago, Yangon had over 50 such stores. Today, fewer than ten remain. Streaming has gutted the rental model — but not entirely. A growing number of young filmmakers now approach Ko Aung to distribute their work physically, as a way to bypass online censorship and reach audiences without smartphones. “I’m not nostalgic,” he says