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Augustus 2022-03-23 09:02:16
Change
The short comment wrote about the change of class, and then said the issue of race.
The soldiers looked down on Ban and his friends because they were yellow and called them Jews with contempt. The class will correct it and say they are Navajo. After entering the enemy camp and sending a signal... -
Leta 2022-03-20 09:02:01
Worth learning from Chinese film
MGM (Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, USA) 2002 Produced
Starring: Nicolas Cage, Adam
Beach Christian Slater , Noah Emmerich
Director: John Woo
Genre: War Movie
Rating: R (Violence)
For John Woo, who has filmed business cards such as "True Colors", "Blood Two Heroes", "Across the World", "Blood on the...

Michael Ng
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Jeromy 2022-03-26 09:01:07
2018/05/19 Second brush. In the interval of the war, the qin and xiao ensemble played a piece of "Swordsman" (I don't know the title of the song), which has an oriental elegance. On the whole, it is a bit childish to shoot war movies with the routine of Hong Kong-style shootout movies, and the role of the Wind Whisperer in the war is also very superficial. From racial conflict to integration, they are all routines, nothing new.
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Kendra 2022-03-26 09:01:07
The handwriting left after watching it at that time had seen many war-themed movies, from "Saving Private Ryan" to "Band of Brothers" and the special experience of Forrest Gump in "Forrest Gump", they were all moved I am impressed by everyone who sees it. They can truly let people touch the blood awakening and cruelty of war... Every day everyone is praying - praying to be alive that day; every day everyone is happy - happy that they are still alive. They are fighting every day, they are watching their closest partners go away every day, watching their bloody bodies, and they seem to remember the smile he gave you yesterday... All this seems unbearable. Nicolas Cage's superb acting, a good interpretation of a soldier who once left a shadow in the war, after returning to the battlefield
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Charlie Whitehorse: [in Navajo] I've never seen so many white men.
Ben Yahzee: Oh, they've never seen so many Navajos before.
Ben Yahzee: Enders, I can't find Whitehorse anywhere. Have you seen him?
Joe Enders: He's over there.
Ben Yahzee: [he sees his friend dead, blown up by a grenade with other Japanese soldiers] This was suppose to be a secured area, what happened?
Joe Enders: I killed him.
Ben Yahzee: You what?
Joe Enders: I took a grenade, threw it in there and blew him up.
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Sargeant Ryan 'Ox' Anderson: Do your johns have any thing to do with these Navajo radiomen?
Joe Enders: I'm not at liberty to say.
Sargeant Ryan 'Ox' Anderson: [notices a new stripe on his uniform] See you got a new stripe on, me too. So I'm guessin the same orders i aint liberated to tell you is the same orders you aint liberated to tell me.
Joe Enders: This is no democracy Sergant, this is the Marines. They look pretty normal I guess, expectin them to wear war paint.
Sargeant Ryan 'Ox' Anderson: Well we might want to go and introduce ourselves they look a little lost.
Joe Enders: Anderson, I wouldn't get too friendly.
Sargeant Ryan 'Ox' Anderson: [to the Navajos] How, just kiddin I'm Ox.
Charlie Whitehorse: I'm Whitehorse, this is Yahzee, Ben.