is more touching than the movie, but the advantage of the movie is that it can visualize the characters
like Hasan inside. The round face, the big eyes, the thick lips
, and when he turned around, he smiled and said for you: Thousands of times, I am willing
to only let you have a sour nose.
After reading the book and watching the movie again and
again , I pondered the lines and Hasan's performance over and over again.
I think of Ali in "Little Shoes",
the thin Iranian boy with splayed eyebrows when he cried.
His grievances, his cowardice, his sincerity, his running, his beliefs
, Hassan and Ali are the two people I have missed for a long time.
Always sympathize with the many weak, perhaps because of the connection of mind and body
, the little hands under the ruins of orphans in the old man's war, begging on the roadside or picking up old things. . . .
A quote from the book: Afghanistan has many children, but no childhood.
More than just Afghanistan and Sierra Leone's tens of millions of child soldiers who are skinny and big-headed refugees
. . . . . . . .
I can only drink green tea and use the computer to cherish the memory here.
I wish I could be like A Bao in the city of God holding a camera to record everything that happened and go
to the depths of war, plague, hunger and exploitation . There are no warriors out there." Comfort yourself . At this time, looking at the above pretentious and powerless words, I just feel ashamed and encourage each other.
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