tv Arts and Culture Deutsche Welle April 22, 2019 7:45pm-8:01pm CEST
7:45 pm
since astronaut neil armstrong took his giant leap for mankind that is if he ever really set foot on the moon believe it or not there are still many conspiracy theorists who say the whole thing was a huge hoax and that the moon landing was actually acted out on a secret film set while far fetched as those theories might seem the film industry has taken them seriously enough we're working on the we are cutting down the fire. well that's embarrassing to say what this means nasa can't do it they can't let manning come back the two cia agents were actually meant to uncover a russian spy of nasa but thanks to a wiretap they discover something much bigger you can make it feel good but as they say if you can't make it fake it so the agent suggest faking the moon landing on a film set. and none other than stanley kubrick had demonstrated just the year before how it's done with his film two thousand and one a space odyssey or did they
7:46 pm
find out what we're doing to get. instead of nasa to make sure the space movie looks like real friends and so we're going to use his face movie to make sure the real space movie looks like space the film operation avalanche takes one of the most common conspiracy theories about the lunar landing and turns it into a totally new story funny and wacky but also thrilling every. group we're doing them and. what they always do there's no time to explain. why their destination was supposed to be mars but the rocket launches without any astronauts on board the one nine hundred seventy s. film capricorn one takes its inspiration from a conspiracy theory that was already making the rounds some eight years after the lunar landings namely that they were all hoax. york oversteer you never know in this story the first manned moon. to mars can't be
7:47 pm
carried out due to a technical fault so the astronauts are ordered to pretend it took place so as not to threaten the entire space program the public is lied to but that's not the real scandal when capricorn one makes its reentry into the earth's atmosphere it becomes clear to the crew that they cannot simply reappear in public. there's an. art form warning issued we should read on the copy they realize that they're on a hit list and run for their lives ruthlessly hunted down. and supposedly some fifteen to twenty percent of americans still believe that the us never put a man on the moon conspiracy theorists have even used images from capricorn one to illustrate their claims despite the fact that it is clearly a work of fiction. a
7:48 pm
certainly very sinister take on things there melissa holroyd has joined me in the studio thanks for joining me melissa what what do you think of these conspiracy theories and why they even still exist well this conspiracy theory in particular is one of the most enduring conspiracy theories i i suspect it's perhaps because of the space race between the u.s.s.r. the u.s.s.r. usa also because of the unpopularity of these trips to the moon and also because of it's just incredible that people have actually landed on the moon now they've made like six trips and then so that would have been meant a lot of faking wouldn't that that's right. from the moon we go to another and word news eons and more specifically the ones on berlin's museum island tell us something about why this island is so special. i think the island is so special
7:49 pm
because here you have five world class museums very close together on a small island in the middle of the city you know it's lovely to be there is very peaceful in some of people lying on the grass in combination ticket with a kind of an actual ticket for the museum island started in eighteen thirty with the altis museum the old museum and by eight hundred forty one there are already plans to build a sanctuary of awesome science on the island today there's the altars museum there's the noise museum the new museum there's the nets are not gallery the outside the old national gallery there's the border museum and there's the pergamon museum the polka museum is famous for its monumental reconstructions it's been undergoing. some controversial at a very long winded renovations in recent years to what was a very expensive but yet one child on museum in that yes it lost its main
7:50 pm
attraction it has the program on out that is been out of sight for the past four years and will continue to be our façade for the next five years so that's a long time but for people who are very interested in this ancient greek city of perth i'm on this something else they can take a look at namely the pan and me tell. the ancient city of pergamon is faithfully recreated in fine detail in a three thousand square metre space the colossal panorama is the work of artist assisi its public debut was in twenty eleven now assisi is presenting an expanded version in what he's dubbed the pen ometer built for the purpose next to berlin's pergamon museum. paragon want to kill its program on since i was a child and i've also been very fascinated with it in terms of the architecture and the way this acropolis was billed as a pile was saying it's almost modern architecture also the way they found this location this mountain in terms of urban planning.
7:51 pm
in preparation for his new panorama yet it got a c.c. has made six trips to the real park i'm on in turkey today the town of america. there he scrutinized the area from every angle hoping to find more inspiration first project. he took photos on the occasion for his original panorama but for this new version he staged additional scenes in berlin with some forty characters. among the scenes are stone masons workshop. a slave market. and a sacrificial altar one of the highlights is the famous program on altar. mattered a lot more this time things that i would normally handle are not part of the exhibition and things from the exhibition or in the panorama of the. a species panorama brings the antiquities to life offering
7:52 pm
a journey back through time to ancient program on nearly two thousand years ago. his use of light is really incredible there really is incredible and the piece takes you through a whole day and a whole on it's lovely so it's really more than just a substitute during the renovations you mentioned five buildings. are on the island is going to be a new addition that's right the jane seeman gallery is in its final stages it's going to serve as the main entrance for older galleries and james simmons family made their money through wool cotton excuse me and and he lived in berlin between eight hundred fifty one and nineteen thirty so that that the james gallery has been put together by a big shock attacked david chipperfield and he's played an ongoing role in the at the museum on and over these so we could have a look at that. the newest museum on berlin's museum island its reconstruction completed in two thousand and nine set new standards. david shipler
7:53 pm
field integrated what remained of the original building with modern architecture in a way that had never been seen before. we've made a small contribution on the museum and we've been very. honored to be lucky to have been in this special city at a very special time and to be part of. burdens continuous. self description. david chipperfield firm is close to completing work on the james cmon gallery which will give the museum island a new central reception area the british architect has left his mark on berlin and many other spots as well. david chipperfield is certainly an architect who's had a long relationship with berlin and i think he quite liked the level of public
7:54 pm
debate in this city found in my challenging melissa. what about your personal highlights newseum and museum island what would be your hot tip for someone as my hot tip somebody who lives in berlin and who's just this is seeing the museum model and just taking a look at the big museum on it i would suggest that pan i'm a tell bought. by personal favorite over the years has been the sculpture collection in the buddha museum when you got that one because i haven't actually been to that one but it on the top of my list thanks to that thanks very much melissa holroyd thanks for joining us and speaking of m. words nick. easy was his full name but he was best known as joe he telling a painter was active from the early fifty nine hundred to his death in sixteen ten and had a profound influence on baroque painting and his main innovation at the time was his hyper realistic style so realistic in fact that it gave this troupe of actors from naples
7:55 pm
a nifty idea. the entombment of christ. caravaggio's famous painting as a tablo on stage. and here an actress strikes the pose of mary magdalen in ecstasy. modeled on caravaggio's portrayed from sixty six. these living pictures became popular in the late eighteenth century it's how arch was offered to raunchy. i mean there are a lot of delayed a few director live you can run there lee came up with this idea in two thousand and six when she gave a talk on caravaggio's working methods at the university innovators a question that was up and for once and me a little bit instead of giving a lecture she had a few students replicate the way kind of worked out in his studio she came to
7:56 pm
realize that this performance had something that spoke to everyone what i meant there to keep on as michelangelo mary see the early painter came to be known as caravaggio the name of the town where his family once lived known for his real ism and chiaroscuro which means stark contrast between light and shadow about joe's approach was revolutionary. he lives and works in naples among other places the city is more than the people inspired him he invited people he met on the street to serve as models for his paintings now all four hundred years on his work so come to life again at the diocesan museum in naples. the manatee are traveling sambal trains several times a week. work requires physical strength concentration and teamwork. caravaggio wanted his paintings to be so realistic that observe. those would feel past subject
7:57 pm
7:58 pm
directs and close up. topics that moves the world. from society and politics to the environment which. is a current affairs documentary. close up ninety minutes long double. the response was a fight for survival. is a dangerous. floods and droughts with climate change become the main driver of mass migration you couldn't write any kind of peace not if you want and probably most of them to come to. the commitments it starts here thirty ish on t w . sure of. what unites.
7:59 pm
divides. what binds the continent to get the bad answers and stories aplenty. spotlight on people. the girls on t w. i was issued when i arrived here i slept with six people in a room similar it was hard i was for. i even got white hair. learning the german language help me out a lot this gets me a little but you need to entrust the lives of slaves you want to their story. the fighting and reliable information for margaret. the
8:00 pm
by. the book . this is you know we do is live from berlin in search of answers after a day of carnage investigators in for a long time grapple with the aftermath of sunday's deadly bombings while officials say they believe a domestic terrorist group was behind the attacks which killed almost three hundred people intelligence chiefs say they want the country's president two weeks ago that islamists were planning suicide attacks on churches also coming up the u.s. and some growing sanctions waivers for importers.
29 Views
Uploaded by TV Archive on
![](http://athena.archive.org/0.gif?kind=track_js&track_js_case=control&cache_bust=570102101)