How good would it be to directly repair the dangerous bridge that the Japanese sank!
Waiting for the Japanese train to pass, and the bridge and the car cover the River Kwai, isn't it?
He is really not British, and he
actually invited the Japanese to kill his compatriots!
This is also called the spirit of the military? !
Soldiers should always hold only one belief - to kill the enemy and protect themselves.
And what about him?
Talk about understanding with the Japanese, get satisfaction and a sense of honor in front of the Japanese,
they obviously have no hatred for the enemy, and
they obviously haven't experienced the Nanjing Massacre.
He gained a blind sense of honor by building bridges and using "made by the British army" for bridges.
They have no concept of war.
Finally, I saw the Japanese had a pistol ready, why didn't he kill the British colonel?
In order to blow up the Bridge on the River Kwai, three soldiers died,
and they were killed by a British colonel who believed that he loved his country, the army, and his principles.
Originally, I liked the whistle inside, but
I didn't expect the story to be so absurd.
Could it be that the life of his compatriots cannot be compared to his blind dignity?
Is this his "do everything well" principle? To build a good bridge for the enemy, let the enemy transport more guns to strangle their compatriots? ?
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