Palace / adidas Originals
"Palaste"
seen from Georgia
seen from Israel
seen from Germany
seen from Nepal

seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from Germany

seen from Malaysia

seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from Germany

seen from Italy
seen from Oman

seen from India
seen from Saudi Arabia
seen from India

seen from United States
seen from China
seen from Russia
Palace / adidas Originals
"Palaste"
Top 10 unglaubliche Paläste
Top 10 unglaubliche Paläste
Paläste - Häuser für große und wohlhabende Individuen - sind entworfen, um eine Wirkung der erhabenen Erhabenheit zu haben. Da die Reichen und Mächtigen die Tendenz und die Mittel haben, ihre Persönlichkeit in der Architektur zu zeigen, ist die Welt mit diesen großartigen und oft faszin...
Hashtags: #Palaste, #Unglaubliche #Reise
Top 10 unglaubliche Paläste
Top 10 unglaubliche Paläste
Paläste - Häuser für große und wohlhabende Individuen - sind entworfen, um eine Wirkung der erhabenen Erhabenheit zu haben. Da die Reichen und Mächtigen die Tendenz und die Mittel haben, ihre Persönlichkeit in der Architektur zu zeigen, ist die Welt mit diesen großartigen und oft faszin...
Hashtags: #Palaste, #Unglaubliche #Reise
Top 10 unglaubliche Paläste
Top 10 unglaubliche Paläste
Paläste - Häuser für große und wohlhabende Individuen - sind entworfen, um eine Wirkung der erhabenen Erhabenheit zu haben. Da die Reichen und Mächtigen die Tendenz und die Mittel haben, ihre Persönlichkeit in der Architektur zu zeigen, ist die Welt mit diesen großartigen und oft faszin...
Hashtags: #Palaste, #Unglaubliche #Reise
6: Festival Prelude
As cities go, Berlin is a peach for navigating. I felt instantly at ease, wandering from the central station down to the Potsdamerplatz, adjacent to the Berlin Palaste, and the fulcrum of the festival. It’s also easy to forget the part Berlin has played in modern history, as one ambles past iconic monuments like the Brandenburg Gate, the Reichstag and several reference markers for the location of the Wall. But when you are actually here, you realise the importance of its divided past, a metaphor in concrete for the rapidly polarising politics after the Second World War.
I’d set myself quite a weighty timetable of films for the Friday. There was almost no way I could have kept to it. First to be cut was Love Is Strange, an interesting situational comedy about a middle-aged gay couple forced to live apart in New york City. It was on at 11am in the Cinestar. No chance then.
Next was Two Men in Town, a remake of a 1970s French film, featuring a curious combination of Forest Whittaker and Harvey Keitel. I managed to miss out on this as I was trying to find my apartment over the other side of town. Double doh!
Third time lucky. I blagged my way into the screening of a film called ’71. Finally my festival could begin.