A friend told me to watch "Indian Thugs" together, played by Aamir Khan.
All I remember is that Aamir Khan is handsome, but I can't remember exactly how.
So, we placed the order without seeing the preview.
When I first saw the word "thug", I thought there would definitely be fights.
But what I didn't expect was the story of Indians fighting for freedom and dignity.
The eagle hovering above is handsome, free and heroic.
This eagle reminds people of that eagle, and certain plots remind people of the Chinese martial arts world.
The first shocking image is the stone statue made of living people (Azad et al).
The "carving" of the stone statue is so lifelike that people think it is real until the rain falls.
Those decorations slowly faded with the rain, revealing the true colors of the stone statue.
They are the group headed by Azad.
Azad is held high above, revealing Azad's status from the start.
Azad is a living person, but it is also a belief in the hearts of living people. Even if Azad dies, this belief will not die.
Faith may be etched in everyone's bones and formed without you noticing.
Although you have persevered, ignored, or even given up, when you meet someone who can turn on the switch of faith, you can never give up again.
Faith becomes poison, a beautiful and poisonous medicine.
Let countless people be obsessed with it, work hard for it, and make people willing to give everything for it.
So faith must be a beautiful poison.
Faith is an illusory thing, but it is never a pity that it is tasteless and discarded.
Although belief is nothing, there is always a moment when it becomes reality.
Once it touches the soil, it will quickly take root and sprout when exposed to water.
No one can stop it, just like human beings are born with desires.
Faith is like this, attached to the existence of human beings, and it also guides human beings to move forward.
Azad's loyalty, trust, integrity, perseverance, and his strength and so on are very moving.
This is the spirit of Azad, and it is also the unique charm of Azad.
Every time I look at the picture of Azad fighting, my heart is always tugged.
In my eyes, he is an elderly man, not a warrior.
I know he's a fighter, but looking at his appearance, I really can't think of him as a fighter.
He has all the conditions for a warrior, but I'm still worried.
Such an inconspicuous old man walking in the crowd can fight with a knife.
Even without a knife, he was able to fight the men of the East India Company.
Perhaps it was his instinct to fight them.
"Trust is my instinct," he told Frangie.
Even knowing that Frangie is not an ally, he instinctively chooses to trust him.
Unreserved trust is the most moving, especially for a liar with ulterior motives but sincerity.
Sometimes scammers value unreserved trust.
Trust is something worse than money.
For the first time, Azad paid the price with his life.
Frangi chose money and betrayed Azad. (Frangie complied with his original wishes.)
Azad's friend died, his brother died, and he nearly died himself. (Captured by the East India Company.)
Azad still trusted Frangi and entrusted Zafila to Frangi.
Azad's generosity to die and the trust that remains intact touches Frangi.
How can a person trust others so unreservedly, especially when betrayal and deception are a foregone conclusion, and he can entrust his most important person and life to this person.
What kind of confidence and courage do you need? I do not know.
It can be said that there is no better choice, only this.
But this trust means a lot to Frankie.
Frangi thought he would keep cheating like this. He called himself a "shameless villain" and called himself a "foreigner" in front of the Indians. The meaning of his name was the meaning of foreigners.
This is a kind of self-deprecation and a kind of self-protection. He knows that he is shameless.
He lives in a cage he weaves, a cage of shameless liars.
He thought he had no dreams and no beliefs, so he admired Azad.
As Azad ploughed the field barefoot, Frankie and Azad had a long conversation.
Azad's faith and trust really touched the spark that Franji had hidden in his heart.
He was shaken when he betrayed Azad, but chose to betray anyway.
He doesn't believe in himself.
It's ridiculous to say that human nature is a very great and very fragile thing.
When others believe in you and think you can, you don't believe in yourself.
Probably doubt has become an instinct, doubting yourself, doubting this matter.
Azad had taken root in Frankie's heart.
Although Frange still thinks the odds are slim, he'll do it anyway.
When you doubt about this, you are already judging the feasibility and odds of your participation in this matter.
Frankie is really Azad's brother this time around.
When Frankie lured the enemy to go deep, he said this sentence: "Azad is dead, and Azad is not dead".
Azad is a person, Azad is a group of people.
This is a belief, a belief to pursue with life.
Faith has been said very tiredly in this day and age, but we can't deny that it is really great.
In this era, and in the era to come, we will still have many people pursuing their own beliefs,
Frankie used a fake map to help Azad and others win a big battle, and the East India Company suffered heavy losses.
However, the people of the East India Company quickly encircled Azad.
Azad shifts positions, and Frangi takes them to Sofia's site.
Zafira told Sofia the truth.
This is the most basic trust between people.
If you are honest with me, I will be honest with you.
Sophia agrees to help, but at the show, Frankie "turns on the line".
Azad is still alive.
Aamir Khan's acting skills are so good, it's impossible to tell which side he is from.
Just when everyone thought Frankie betrayed again, the story took a turn.
Frankie's name is betrayal, but it's really saving people.
Azad wins.
Indians in shackles want to live in order to take off their shackles, while Indians without shackles are free and dignified.
Before, Azad said something to Zafira: "I will climb out of hell to protect you."
Later, Azad did exactly that.
Azad reminds me of a few poems I recited in my school days:
"Lian Po is old, can he still eat?"
"A martyr in his twilight years is full of courage."
Although Xin Qiji and Cao Cao are not the same generation, Cao Cao's poems are the most beautiful response to Xin Qiji's poems.
The picture comes from the Internet
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