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Clay 2022-03-30 09:01:08
【Film】19007[2.3] "Private War"
The significance of the existence of a reporter is that she goes to those places where mortals are unable or unwilling to be there in person, witnesses what happened, bears everything in it silently, and then uses the most powerful language and pictures to convey the most intuitive first to the...
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Lura 2022-03-29 09:01:07
Watched about two weeks ago
I thought the movie was decent; it almost made me tear up. But I don't get why the film was structured as if it was a mystery that the protagonist died at a certain time and place, when it is public knowledge.
The acting was good, and Pike even looks a little bit like the main character in...

Emil Hajj
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Daniella 2022-03-29 09:01:07
The things of the same family and genus as Lu Wei, or they are cruel, I am really sorry for the natural laws of this world. As far as the battle of Sri Lanka that took its left eye at the beginning of the film, if it weren't for China's active role in it, and let these European and American war stories that set fire to the mountain as a show, Ceylon would definitely still be a place where the long-term civil war was divided.
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Kasey 2022-04-23 07:03:50
See half asleep. . .
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Title Card: In 1986, Marie Colvin began a career as a war correspondent writing on the frontlines of every major conflict from Iraw to Afghanistan to Syria.
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[first lines]
Interviewer: Last question. Fifty years from now, some youngster's gonna pull this disc out of a box and maybe make a judgment about becoming a journalist. What would you want that youngster to know about Marie Colvin and about being a war correspondent?
Marie Colvin: Very difficult question. It's like writing, uh, your own obituary. I suppose to look back at it and say, you know, I cared enough to go to these places and write, in some way, something that would make, uh, someone else care as much about it as I did at the time. Part of it is you're never gonna get to where you're going if you acknowledge fear. I think fear comes later,
[realization chuckle]
Marie Colvin: when it's all over.