Other entertainment in Tangier
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A
Beach Club 555
You pass through airport-like security run by SWAT team guards, and find yourself on a faux tropical lagoon, replete with bridge and tiki huts. Inside, waiters dressed in white satin and fake afros serve visiting mafiosi. Unlike most anywhere in Tangier, the place is crawling with young women, known locally as geishas, who work freelance for the house.
reviewed
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Loft
Easily Tangier’s premier nightspot, this world class, state-of-the-art club holds 2000 people and feels like an enormous silver cruise ship, with upper-storey balconies, sparkling metal railings, billowing sail-like curtains, spot lights cutting through the artificial fog – and no cover. Go after midnight.
reviewed
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B
Americain’s Pub
Don’t be fooled by the name: this pub is outfitted as an authentic part of the London underground, with white tiled walls, ubiquitous red trim and signage far more authentic than the Bobbies would appreciate. It’s the perfect place to hide: there’s no street number, and the phone is out of order.
reviewed
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C
Pilo
A party atmosphere pervades these two floors of local colour, underscored by some high-energy music (‘mo-rockin’?) and festive lighting. Women can feel comfortable here, as the management has figured the rest of us out: ask them to show you the Freudian poster entitled ‘What’s On a Man’s Mind’.
reviewed
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D
Hole in the Wall Bar
For chuckles only, walk up Rue du Prince Heretier from the Terrasse des Paresseux one-and-a-half blocks and you will see a pair of swinging black doors, Old West style. Welcome to the smallest bar in Tangier, if not the world. Beer only.
reviewed
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E
Regine Club
Welcome to the 1980s. This disco has stayed the same so long it is a museum piece, replete with glass-reflecting ball, purple velour couches, movie posters from Terminator and a musty smell. Did we mention the clientele?
reviewed
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Cinema Rif/Cinematheque de Tanger
Your first choice, here you’ll find both indy and mainstream films, mostly American, Moroccan, Spanish or French (with Spanish and American films typically dubbed into Arabic).
reviewed
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F
Cinema Paris
Shows French, American and Bollywood films, the latter two dubbed into French or Arabic.
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