Everything in the name of art becomes soft and warm

Letitia 2022-04-19 09:01:50

A line at the end of the film "Thirty years later, who will remember that someone once paid the price for art." Prepare to write a simple film review.

Everything in the name of art becomes soft and warm.

All sacrifices for your dreams and ideals have become worthwhile.

Movies set in World War II will not be separated from life and death, but George Clooney wants to express something other than life and death. Art? Probably just an entry point.

If something is out of our control, like an irreversible war, like some bloodshed and sacrifice that is necessary. So what can we control? Can we control our own lives? If you have to die, how can you die? I think that's what the film is trying to convey.

Recently, I was making up for the 2014 Oscar-nominated films and found that American films are more and more like Japanese films.

"The Monuments Men" is also a moving, but not tearful movie.

Some people sacrificed, but died beautifully, died gratifyingly and moved. This moving makes you not cry, but full of joy.

The film is filled with some small jokes, it is the warmth of human nature, it is ideals and love that continue the life of art.

Fortunately, there are grandfathers who will tell their children the story of that time.

Fortunately, we still have people who sacrificed for ideals to continue civilization.

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Extended Reading

The Monuments Men quotes

  • Frank Stokes: You can wipe out an entire generation, you can burn their homes to the ground and somehow they'll still find their way back. But if you destroy their history, you destroy their achievements and it's as if they never existed. That's what Hitler wants and that's exactly what we are fighting for.

  • James Granger: Stop, stop. Stop. I seem to have stepped on a land mine... of some sort.

    Frank Stokes: Why d'you do something like that?

    James Granger: It was a slow day.

    Frank Stokes: Well, I wouldn't move.

    James Granger: I'd like to at some point.