Seeing a lot of reviews saying this is a film about Islam's self-appreciation and finding that the review is only 3.8? ! I have a sloppy attitude towards Islam, but after watching it, I still want to ask a question: Why don't people complain about self-appreciation in movies like "Alexander the Great", "The 300 Warriors" and the Roman War?
We have watched Western-style blockbusters for so long that we think that all the warriors in ancient Greece should be muscular men, and they should be able to defeat a hundred with one, while the Persians should be wretchedly slashing with their knives in a bewitching dark filth; Persian palaces are destined to be dimly lit, full of flesh, intoxicated with money, writhing waists, and charming eyes. And the green rice fields in Greece are always bright and sunny, everyone fights for democracy and freedom... But you know, those democracies are only the democracy of the city-state men, and those soldiers have their own slaves; those sounds have nothing to do with the US presidential election speech. Are speeches about the sense of time difference really unchanged for thousands of years? After reading "300 Warriors", I feel so sad, sad for the Persians: Persians think that recording history is a woman's business, and they disdain to record, so after a thousand years, everything depends on the history of the other side!
I have also seen some crusade movies. The handsome knight rides a horse, carries a long sword, kills like hemp, justice like a god, and there is a beautiful woman who was born. For him, whether he betrays the country or betrays his faith, he loves him wholeheartedly anyway; but Do you have the heart to watch the history of the Crusades, and do you have the heart to watch the cleansing of the pagans by Christianity? In "Kingdom of Heaven", the male protagonist resists the powerful Saladin. It seems that Saladin finally allowed them to return to Europe because they were moved by their courage. When they captured Jerusalem, the cleansing of Muslims never seemed to exist, and the male protagonist's justice seemed unquestionable...
There are also some medieval movies. The male protagonist always dances with a long sword and is very elegant, such as "Braveheart", such as "King Arthur", etc., but there is no discovery, there will always be around when they fight A fat man with a big axe? Admit it, the weapons used in the Middle Ages in Europe were not handsome long swords, or that fat man's axe; heavy armor could be chopped with an axe, it could shock, it was extremely lethal, and the long sword was cool at best.
Well, back to this film, beautification is a must. After all, everyone is beautifying themselves psychologically - just like Europeans. Due to the influence of the west wind, the Turks did not vilify the Emperor Dante, but seeing the weakness of Western knights and soldiers seems to be unacceptable, we may have been brainwashed too much...
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