1920s berlinの例文
- The rhetoric of these resembled the 1920s Berlin Dadaist manifestos.
- The 1920s Berlin Project has been expanding and is continuously keeps being updated.
- Night life bloomed in 1920s Berlin.
- Another example are historical role-playing sims such as 1880s Victorian London and The 1920s Berlin Project.
- In the 1920s Berlin became widely known internationally as a fast-living city of cabarets and transvestite shows.
- Ruttman's experimental documentary " Berlin : Symphony of a Metropolis " ( 1927 ) epitomised the energy of 1920s Berlin.
- It is the Mudd Club . . . . For sheer kinkiness, there has been nothing like it since the cabaret scene in 1920s Berlin .
- Dozens of billboards like it were lined up throughout Berlin's Potsdamer Platz, the heart of 1920s Berlin and now bustling again in the reunified German capital.
- While only encouraged to do so in 1880s Victorian London, visitors to the 1920s Berlin Project are required to dress accurately as part of the history based immersive experience.
- But what he chose to photograph reveals the odd perspective of the artist who came of age in 1920s Berlin, influenced by the decadent, cosmopolitan night life celebrated in " Cabaret ."
- ""'Parole Chicago " "'was a German television series directed by Reinhard Schwabenitzky, starring Christoph Waltz as Eduard " Ede " Bredo, an inept wannabe criminal in 1920s Berlin.
- It also covers the flamboyance of 1920s Berlin, followed by the " Terror and Persecution " of the Nazi era, the rebirth of the movement in the United States and Europe up to today's AIDS crisis.
- Here Wilder taps into his 1920s Berlin roots, and he and Seitz give the film a look subtly reminiscent of German expressionism, with dramatic deployment of light and shadows . " He was ready for anything, " Wilder said . " Sometimes the rushes were so dark that you couldn't see anything.
- Writing essays for the Virginia Quarterly Review, she wedded politics to cultural criticism as she recounted her travels through Europe as a literary agent, telling firsthand of the distinctly Russian character of train journeys to the Caucasus; a 1920s Berlin in the midst of rising Nazism; government wiretapping and the antiquarian book trade in London.