"Empire of the Sun" was read with my children. Children can't understand. All he cares about is whether the worms can eat it or not. To be honest, if it wasn't for Spielberg, it would have been scolded. I really don't get used to the Chinese people at all. The infinite blackness may not have a good impression on us at all. I agree that there are still many, many distortions in the values, but the director's interest may not be in the war itself. This is also the source of the explosion point, and it is easy for people to complain. Regardless of right or wrong, the Japanese are sometimes very good, and they are given food, and at most they will be beaten, but you see other people, it is human nature to rob things, take advantage of the fire, the law of the jungle and so on. I really liked the part when Jamie came home and saw the white powder hands and footprints, very talented. What's the point of that sexual enlightenment episode if it's not good enough. It didn't work in the end. What he wants to talk about seems to be the split between idealism and reality, and the part of this split is the part that makes people grow. Jamie has always held the idealism of the high aristocracy, and this idealism is also his innocence. So he also admires Japanese pilots. No matter what you are in, it is great to fight in the sky. He doesn't care who does who, who loses or who wins. Just fly. He was truly disillusioned when his Japanese friend finally died. Whatever the reality does to me, I have my ideals. Until this ideal is gone, and then change into a person. In the end he really didn't know his mother anymore. But overall it wasn't his fault. I always thought it would be more reasonable for the next movie to be Bell playing the Rich Family Killer.
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