We'll meet the lieutenant colonel, but we won't meet room seven

Josie 2022-04-20 09:02:09

In fact, overall, this should be regarded as a relatively warm story. Because many of the darker assumptions I thought would happen didn't come to fruition. For example, the deserter may not tell the truth; Memo was executed the first time he found the little girl's body; including that Memo was actually dead, and the little girl was left with his ashes in the end. But when we look at it from the beginning to the end, we will find that the only villain who oppressed us from the beginning to the end is the lieutenant colonel. When Memo came to pick up Owa, some children said that Memo was a lunatic, and the teacher came out to stop them; Memo tried to get Owa back the schoolbag, but was beaten to the ground by the lieutenant colonel, and the neighbors came to speak for him; When people were playing games there, some children wanted to bully him, but the lieutenant colonel's daughter stopped him. She said, don't do this, he is Owa's father. What we can see is that even though the murder of a little girl is a serious crime in Turkey, the warden is still willing to uphold the justice of the law to ensure Memo's safety; I am willing to realize Li Dai Tao Zong's plan for Mei Mo; and every cellmate in Room No. 7 takes care of and helps Mei Mo. The plot is even so warm, I can't believe it, but the lieutenant colonel actually shot the deserter in the end. So, in fact, I am more looking forward to the Korean version, and I will check it out when I have time. I want to know if the Korean version of be is compared with realism, is there any more moving place in Turkey's plot with a little idealized he? Of course, it is undeniable that this movie still has its shining points. The tears are due to the relationship between the little girl and her father. Memo is another image of a good man and a good father who will not defend himself. So we were moved by the secret message between their father and daughter, so we were moved by Owa's waiting by the ruins, so we were moved by the letter that Memo wrote in Room 7, describing his life, so we were moved by The father and daughter talked on both sides of the high wall, including being moved by the final reunion. What about the things that make us miserable? What we feel bad about is that Mei Mo desperately saved 400 yuan to buy a schoolbag for Owa, but someone else took it away; what we feel bad about is that the lieutenant colonel issued an order to let the murderer of her daughter be hanged in a newspaper; We were saddened by the fact that the lieutenant colonel shot and killed the deserter at the end. So what are we suffering from? We are suffering from the absence of justice, the oppression of power. And we know that we won't meet the warden, we won't meet the teacher, we won't meet the seventh room, but we will meet the lieutenant colonel. So we cry with emotion, so we bless Memo.

View more about Miracle in Cell No. 7 reviews

Extended Reading
  • Camryn 2022-03-27 09:01:13

    A Tale of Two Countries (South Korea and Turkey). Haven't seen the original, Turkish prisons really are. . A model of freedom and democracy!

  • Jeffrey 2022-03-26 09:01:09

    The photography of Fuhuadao has been upgraded in an all-round way, which is more cinematic than the original version. The style is more realistic than comedy, and two roles of grandma and a dead man have been added, which are reasonable and vivid. The little girl's smile looks like Heidi, so she always smiles with that standard... It incorporates local religious elements, and the episode and ending music of "We Are All Travelers" are good. Facts have proved that the same script and a wave of actors can definitely crush the original Korean acting skills.

Miracle in Cell No. 7 quotes

  • Memo: Ova, how's Grandma?

    Memo: Nana became an angel, Dad.

  • Ova (Child): Lingo! Lingo!