![]() That is why we have intensively curated a collection of premium small-group trips as an invitation to meet and connect with new, like-minded people for once-in-a-lifetime experiences in three categories: Culture Trips, Rail Trips and Private Trips. Increasingly we believe the world needs more meaningful, real-life connections between curious travellers keen to explore the world in a more responsible way. We are proud that, for more than a decade, millions like you have trusted our award-winning recommendations by people who deeply understand what makes certain places and communities so special. Since you are here, we would like to share our vision for the future of travel - and the direction Culture Trip is moving in.Ĭulture Trip launched in 2011 with a simple yet passionate mission: to inspire people to go beyond their boundaries and experience what makes a place, its people and its culture special and meaningful - and this is still in our DNA today. ![]() After not hearing from Berghain again, the pair decided to launch their Kickstarter campaign to fund Berghain ze game. Not backing down, Kandiloros and Bergkvist informed the lawyer they had permission to use the name for a card game in Sweden. However, a few weeks before launching their campaign they were contacted by a lawyer representing Berghain, enquiring why the pair hadn’t asked for permission to make the game and pointing out that the club’s name is trademarked in Germany. Finding traditional funding routes too conservative for their fetish-club tribute, the pair decided to turn to Kickstarter to help raise the funds needed to make their idea a reality. Together they’ve found themselves at the centre of a legal dispute with a bastion of Berlin nightlife. Keen to work together again, their love for techno, clubbing and board games saw them combining these passions for their latest project, Bergnein, originally titled Berghain ze Game. As with the three predecessors, Chad Stahelski directed.The duo behind the game, Alexander Kandiloros and Joakim Bergkvist, made their first board game together over four years ago. The film has been in German cinemas since March 23. “Chapter 4” was filmed partly in Paris and in the Babelsberg studio in Potsdam, with the power plant in Berlin serving as the backdrop for the nightclub. The trained photographer also exhibits in Berlin, for the last time in 2020.Īlso starring again are Laurence Fishburne and Lance Reddick, who died on March 17, as well as Bill Skarsgård and Scott Adkins. Marquardt already worked as a bouncer in Berghain’s predecessor “Ostgut”, with the popularity of one of the most famous techno clubs in the world and “the hardest door” (meaning the mostly superficial decision about admission by the bouncer) the 61-year-old only became a scene celebrity and has meanwhile also gained notoriety beyond that. The German capital is portrayed through the well-intentioned lens of fascination: exciting and adventurous, dark, mystical and just as Berghain-Berlin is imagined in the USA, the fictional club is located on the Museum Island, which in reality is not quite so mystical in Berlin-Mitte. ![]() “Klaus” is a member of the “Ruska Roma” organization and takes Keanu Reeves, the eponymous protagonist of the John Wick series, to the Berghain-esque electro club “Heaven and Hell”, where it is then – without revealing too much – comes to an action scene, which of course doesn’t stop the Berlin club-goers from dancing. “I’m Klaus,” he repeats his only sentence. The Berghain bouncer and photographer has a cameo appearance as a henchman set around a fictional Berlin club. Sven Marquardt can be seen in the fourth part of the “John Wick” saga. ![]()
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