Terrorists killed at least 153 people and wounded scores of other innocents in coordinated shooting and suicide-bomb attacks in Paris late Friday that included a mass execution at a rock concert, authorities said.

The carnage began at about 10 p.m. Paris time, with one group of jihadis targeting venues packed with people in a night-life district and another attacking near a soccer stadium where President Francois Hollande was watching a match with Germany, French police said.

The well-planned strikes played out in multiple locations:

– At the Bataclan theater, four gunmen wearing suicide vests — screaming, “This is for Syria!” and “Allahu akbar!” — opened fire on the packed house that had gathered to see the American rock band Eagles of Death Metal.

The black-clad killers then picked off wounded victims one at a time, as witnesses described the horror on social media.

The gunmen detonated suicide vests when police stormed the theater, and killed at least 118 concertgoers.

Witnesses said they heard several rounds of gunfire and explosions at the theater, including during the final siege.

– The same attackers had first sprayed several nearby cafes with automatic weapons fire, killing several diners and wounding many others at Le Petit Cambodge Cambodian restaurant in the 10th arrondissement.

Dozens of shots were fired, said witnesses, who described the scene as a “nightmare,” with bodies in the street and police and ambulances rushing to their aid, the Liberation newspaper reported.

- They also strafed Le Carillon bar near the concert.

“We were listening to music when we thought we heard shots. A few seconds later, we were in a scene out of a war,” one of a dozen doctors from the Saint-Louis Hospital told Le Monde.

“There was blood everywhere. We tried to go as quickly as possible. The wounded were evacuated. I did not see the assailants. A friend said he saw a man with a war armament,” he said.

– At least four bodies were seen splayed on a street and covered in blankets outside La Petit Baiona bistro in the 11th arrondissement.

– Simultaneously, a second team of consisting of a suicide bomber and gunmen targeted the area outside Stade de France, where 80,000 fans watched the home team defeat the Germans in a “friendly” match.

Hollande was hustled away by his security detail, but the game was allowed to finish before fans gathered on the field.

– A shooting was also reported at Les Halles shopping center.

Paris police prefect Michel Cadot said all the attackers were believed dead, although authorities were hunting for any possible accomplices.

In an address broadcast around the world, Hollande said of the massacre: “It’s a horror.”

“Two decisions will be taken: A state of emergency will be decreed, which means certain places will be closed, traffic may be banned and searches may also take place throughout the Paris region,” he said.

A citywide curfew was put into effect in Paris for the first time since 1944.

“The second decision I have taken is to close the borders. We must guarantee that no one can come in to commit any act. And at the same time, those who may have committed crimes can be arrested if they try to leave the country,” he said.

The shattered nation’s leader vowed to defeat the terrorists.

“Who are these criminals? Who are these terrorist who are attacking us? My heart goes out to the victims and their families. We will come together. France is strong,” Hollande said.

“What the terrorists want is for us to be scared. But in the face of terror, we have to be united and will vanquished these terrorists.

“Long live the republic, and long live France.”

At the White House, President Obama said, “This is not just an attack on Paris or the people of France, it was an attack on humanity.”

He said the US would provide any assistance France needs, calling the country “our oldest ally.”

“This is a heartbreaking situation. Obviously, those of us in the United States know what it’s like. We’ve gone through these kinds of episodes ourselves. Whenever these kinds of attacks happened, we’ve always been able to count on the French people to stand with us.

“We intend to be there with them in that same fashion.”

Le Carillon and the Bataclan are among the best-known venues in eastern Paris — and are in the same general neighborhood where the Charlie Hebdo offices were when they were attacked by jihadis last January.

France has been on edge since deadly attacks by Islamic extremists on the satirical newspaper and on a kosher grocery that left 20 dead.