The protagonist Zamperini has a tenacious spirit, a powerful force that is unyielding and unwilling to admit defeat. I remember when he first started the long-distance running test, his brother shouted from the sidelines: You foreigner. When Zamperini heard this, he immediately ran faster as if he had eaten gunpowder. (Zamperini is a descendant of the first generation of Italian immigrants in California)
When the camera switched to high school, Zamper was maliciously stepped on by a player, but instead of giving up, he chased after him and finally won the game. This kind of indomitableness comes from his bones. After 47 days of drifting at sea, Zan Pei supported the three of them like a belief and spent the difficult drifting years.
The climax of the film is the days when Zan Pei was captured by the Japanese army in a POW concentration camp. His entanglement with the Japanese officer Watanabe can be described as entangled. After Zampe entered the prison camp, Watanabe's attention and abuse of him never stopped. But Zampe never gave in.
The scene that moved me the most was when Watanabe asked Zan Pei to lift a heavy cement bar in Naoejin prisoner-of-war concentration camp. Zambe had broken his ankle the day before, and Watanabe had the tired and wounded Zamori lift the cement bar and ordered the soldiers to shoot him once he was down. Under the scorching sun, Zan Pei, who was physically and mentally exhausted, couldn't lift the cement bar more and more. The time seemed to be long, and everyone slowly stopped and looked at Zan Pei. All the American soldiers stopped and silently cheered on Zampe. Watanabe, who was standing opposite, looked at Zan Pei with an increasingly disdainful look. Suddenly, Zan Pei's eyes burst out with a resolute divine light, and the strength inspired from nowhere suddenly lifted the cement bar, and the struggling roar made the opposite Watanabe instantly fear.
That is a kind of unyielding from the bones, it is a kind of strength that comes from the soul. This American legend is like a miracle. The Olympic Games, sea rafting, and a series of great changes in the life of prisoners of war have not changed his beliefs. His life is full of perseverance and perseverance.
Classic line: If you can take it, you can make it.
Dare to practice, to achieve.
A moment of pain is worth a lifetime of glory
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Don't look at me. Don't look at me
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(Original by Leng Zimo, welcome to reprint, please indicate the source)
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