The post-war is just as brutal as the post-war

Alta 2022-04-21 09:03:01

The invaded country has left indelible wounds on the people and society. In fact, it is also a cycle of reincarnation. After Germany entered the war, its military resources were depleted, and young people were gradually conscripted into the army and came to the front line. At the moment when they finally announced their surrender, Became a prisoner of many countries, and became the object of the host country. There is a great change in thinking, and the soldiers have always retained the original kindness of human beings. They do not have much concept of war, and they are vividly reflected in the process of rescuing the little girl. There is a line in the play "Germany is also a ruin." After the war, Denmark is even more so, leaving a large area of ​​minefields. Recalling the border of Guangxi and Yunnan in my country, a large minefield was created due to the self-defense counterattack against Vietnam. , the terrain is far less open than here, and there are no prisoners for dispatch, that is, the PLA soldiers manually demining one by one, experiencing the test of life and death in the post-war peace period, just a small mistake, everything will be in ashes.

View more about Land of Mine reviews

Extended Reading
  • Jimmy 2022-03-23 09:02:46

    It's hilarious to see some people mention "redemption". Teenagers forced to go to war, forced to be Nazis, forced to demining with their lives, redemption, you say?

  • Kaylie 2022-03-24 09:02:59

    The cruelty and cruelty of the victorious restorers are no more dignified than the cruelty and cruelty of the invaders. The two are of the same origin. If demining is an atonement, it should also be atonement by real criminals. Evil is rewarded with evil, often in dislocations—this is the real rule in the real world, and in many cases it is even an explicit rule.

Land of Mine quotes

  • Lt. Ebbe Jensen: If they are old enough to go to war, they are old enough to clean up.

  • closing title card: After the war, more than 2000 German prisoners were forced to remove over 1.5 million landmines from Denmark's west coast.

    closing title card: Nearly half of them were killed or severely wounded.

    closing title card: Many were barely more than children.