I watched the whole film in one breath, and I kept thinking about the banner of my father's generation, we were once a soldier and the fall of the Black Hawk and other similar movies. I wanted to criticize the consistent patriotism of Hollywood blockbusters, but I couldn't find a market. Instead, his own thinking was criticized, and he felt that this was the real war, exposing the most primitive killing instinct at a glance. When Sean Penn risked his life to save the wounded soldiers and failed, and the dog next to him said that the medal was scolded, I thought of Winters; when Feffer was surrounded by the Japanese army and calmly raised his gun and died, the long scene surrounding the camera made me think of Winters. I am reminded of Bemak, in the poetic picture, the bloody killing of young people and the loss of conscience.
However, after reading "Blood on the Melon Island" by Jinghua Publishing House, I found a flaw: the so-called 201 highland battle does not exist, and it is impossible for the American soldiers to attack the Japanese machine gun positions head-on. On the contrary, it was the Japanese who suffered heavy casualties and cut off supplies during the attack. The serious illness of the United States is actually an interpretation of the opponent's bad command and embarrassing situation, so what we see is the shadow of the shadow, or it has been processed by disguise.
History is really a little girl, maybe what we see has long been impure!
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The Thin Red Line reviews