The Black Tent - The Ruins

The Ruins

The film used the site of the Roman ruins at Sabratha in Libya, which is by the sea, although the plot suggests that the camp is deep in the Libyan dessert. This is a plot device to provide a bit of eye candy to the viewer and a reason for the Germans to visit in small numbers, like regular tourists.

Read more about this topic:  The Black Tent

Other articles related to "ruins, the ruins":

List Of Roman Public Baths - Urban Baths - Tunisia
... Dougga - Bath of the Cyclopses (ruins) Dougga - Antonian Bath (ruins) Dougga - Aïn Doura Bath (ruins) Tunis (Carthage) - Antonine baths (ruins) ...
Mythology Of Lost - The Island - Structures - The Ruins
... There are ruins on the Island, many with hieroglyphs ... Further ruins are revealed in "The Brig" when the Others tie Locke's father to the broken base of a large, stone column ...
Manjusri Monastery - Plant and Buildings
... Next to the reconstructed museum stands the impressive (although in ruins) Togchin temple ruins, originally built in 1749 with architecture that recalls the temples of Tibet ... In all, the ruins of 17 buildings, distributed over a rising terrain, can be identified throughout the vast area of the monastery ...
Ruins - Aesthetics
... In the Middle Ages Roman ruins were inconvenient impediments to modern life, quarries for pre-shaped blocks for building projects, or of marble to be burnt for agricultural lime ... With the Renaissance, ruins took on new roles among a cultural elite, as examples for a consciously revived and purified architecture all' antica, and for a new ... own day as they would one day appear as ruins ...
Sinuessa - Ruins
... The ruins of Sinuessa are still visible on the seacoast just below the hill of Mondragone, which forms the last underfall or extremity of the long ridge of ...

Famous quotes containing the word ruins:

    To sleep around is absolutely wrong for a woman; it’s degrading and it completely ruins her personality. Sooner or later it will destroy all that is feminine and beautiful and idealistic in her.
    Barbara Cartland (b. 1901)

    By what a delicate and far-stretched contribution every island is made! What an enterprise of nature thus to lay the foundations of and to build up the future continent, of golden and silver sands and the ruins of forests, with ant-like industry.
    Henry David Thoreau (1817–1862)