Shi Muer, an 8-year-old boy, was born in Judea. Like many Jews who were imprisoned in concentration camps, he also wore eye-catching striped pajamas and became a member of the barbed wire who was reserved by death. day. Bruno, a child of the same age as a Nazi officer, lives in a completely different world from Schmoor. The difference between the two worlds is so directly presented in the pupils and eyes of the two little boys. What you see in the eyes of young Schmoor is full of fear, sadness and helplessness about the future. It was an 8-year-old boy who couldn't bear the Jewish food, the pain of fate; but in the eyes of the Nazi officer Bruno, there was the innocence, curiosity and kindness that a child of this age should have. Seeing these in the eyes of the two little boys, heaviness and sorrow will arise in the bottom of their hearts involuntarily, lamenting the cruelty and darkness of the Nazis dividing human beings into different worlds by race. Two boys meet in front of the barbed wire that separates the two worlds, and the innocence makes the children in the two worlds become friends. After watching the movie for a long time, this scene in the movie is still repeated in my memory. Schmoor followed his father to work at Bruno's house. Bruno steals the cake his family is going to enjoy to his friends. , the Nazi escort found the missing cake. In his own home, Bruno not only failed to protect his friend Schmüll, but also confessed to the Nazis that Schmüll stole the cake, causing Schmüll to be severely beaten. Later, Bruno couldn't hold back his guilt and missed his friends. He stole the food from the family and came to the barbed wire again. The two boys met again on both sides of the barbed wire. With a scarred face, Schmüll quickly forgave Bruno who had confessed himself, and devoured the food brought to him by his friend... This episode is too poignant and emotional. It is not so much that Schmoor forgave Bruno who let him be beaten and punished because of his innocence and kindness, but rather because of the food that Bruno brought him, which was the starving Schmoor to. living instinct. When survival has become a luxury, what is dignity? Not to mention such a choice in front of an 8-year-old child. When the movie came to an end, the black door that devoured the lives of countless people in striped pajamas stood up in the distant view for a long time, and the depressed mood refused to disperse for a long time, making people feel a little cold. Behind that black gate, Schmoor was dead, and so was Bruno. One was killed by a friend's father, the other was killed by his own father, how cruel and ironic. People in two worlds, no matter how far apart or how different, are the same people once they put on striped pajamas.
Also a nice movie.
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