Advantages: 17 songs (Long performance), special features and just a fantastic experience Disadvantages: No Wollt Ihr Das Bett In Flammen Sehen on the playlist.
A really good live DVD of the german heavy metal legends. Contains pretty much all pre-mutter songs. Including the sehnsucht album as well as the Herzeleid album. It also contains a one off song called Wilder Wein which is more of a gentle/soft song. (Still good!). The DVD I have contains 17 songs all together and some of the performances, if not all, are just absolutley brilliant. Every song comes alive and with features such as Multicamera Mode which allows you to watch each member of the band throughout a few of the songs it's fantastic. You would swear that you are actually there! It's also got a fan contest in which you can unlock a secret video. The only problem I had with this DVD was the fact that it did not contain the Wollt Ihr Das Bett in Flammen Sehen?. It's available in the uncensored version but I think that's only ...
Advantages: Well acted, keeps you engaged throughout Disadvantages: None
LivingIn Oblivion is a low budget independent film written and directed by Tom DiCillo and starring Steve Buscemi and Dermot Mulroney.
Sure, these aren't A-list stars, but that lends itself to the story. If it was a film about the making of a film and you had George Clooney and Brad Pitt pretending to be small time actors you wouldn't believe it. That's why it was better to use less well known actors, it pulls you more into the story.
The film takes place during one day on set of a low budget movie, and documents all the problems that the director, Nick (Buscemi), and everyone else can encounter, from equipment malfunctioning to office politics to actors forgetting their lines. It's almost like a documentary, it is very realistic and gives you the complete story as to what it's like trying to get a film made.
There are a few ...
Advantages: Germany's capital and most interesting city Disadvantages: a bit too large, distances too long
Berlin*, Berlin,
Wir fahren nach Berlin!
(Berlin, Berlin,
We're heading for Berlin!)
(pronounced Ber-leen, stress on the second syllable)
This slogan has been chanted enthusiastically for ages whenever a German sports team made it to the capital for the last round, meanwhile it has left the confines of sports and is now even used by the Berlin Tourist Board for a campaign to attract visitors.
I've been to four Berlinsin my life: when in my mother's womb I was inBerlin, then the capital of the Third Reich, from the GDR (German Democratic Republic), where we later lived, I visited Berlin once in the 1950s, a much smaller city then (only the Soviet sector), but still a capital, the capital of the GDR.
After fleeing to West Germany I visited West Berlin, not a capital any more, but no ordinary city, either, it had become ...