Movies in 2002, reflections in 20 years

Nicole 2022-01-05 08:02:31

I saw a film review in the film review section that was written 5 years ago. It's kind of emotional. In the past five years, many great changes have taken place in our country.

That film review incorporated political ideology into the understanding of the film, and I very much agree with this way of viewing the bigger picture. However, the Western democratic system that the author longs for, describes the Soviet clients in the movie as representing dictatorship, and our "heavenly great cause" ordinary people have no choice. . .

Not only makes me feel a lot of emotion. I want to write something out for others to think about together.

If you want to think about it politically, I think, by the way, you have to think about it. Why did this girl die in Sweden, a Western democratic country? Moreover, is it still a country (compared to the Soviet Union or our China) that never has to think about war?

From this perspective, can it be understood that no matter what the system of a country is, the people at the bottom will encounter all kinds of hardships. And people in communist countries should reflect on whether they have been brainwashed by the so-called "advanced" Western civilization like the little girl in the film, over-beautifying their existence in the world, forgetting that they are also full of them. What about darkness and traps?

The prostitution in the Soviet Union is a symbol of dictatorship, so what does the Swedish prostitution group symbolize?

Does the civilization of a country depend on the system or on the direction of the ruling party?

In China, 40 years after the reform and opening up, one billion people no longer have to worry about a meal, and start worrying about buying a house or a car, whether they can live a better life, from Ethiopia, to Yugoslavia, to South American countries, Up to now, the Internet sprays in China have habitually compared China with various western developed countries. Of course, we as a developing country still have various disadvantages. Compared with the dozens of advanced countries, we are still backward in this way and that we cannot outperform each of their developed countries in all aspects and fields at the same time.

However, the changes in the objects of these comparisons also prove that we have been moving forward, and that we are walking quite fast, and that we have walked in a pattern along the way. Isn't it worthy of recognition?

So at this time, these blind inferiority kneelings, superstitious belief in the West is all good, and our people will never be able to live like humans. Is it necessary to change a little bit?

Especially this year’s epidemic, this year’s floods, this year’s forest fires, which one did not happen in Western countries? How did they deal with it? How do we deal with it? What is the executive power of their government and where is the focus? What is the executive power of our government and where is the focus. Should we compare them?

No country is perfect, and it is absolutely impossible for a ruling party to be perfect. The same is true in Western countries, including the United States, Britain, France, Germany, and Sweden in the film. This is always neutral and basically impossible. War requires only a country that develops the economy with peace of mind. They can't be perfect, there will be prostitutes like the Soviet Union, and there will be a dark side.

So, why China, which has only developed for 40 years, should be demanded by those who are reluctant to demand the standards of advanced Western countries?

As citizens of a country that has experienced a hundred and fifty years of war and chaos, we should also understand that a strong country leads to peace and security.

As a Chinese, one has to broaden his horizons, operate his brain, and stand up his spine. This is the way to behave. Perhaps this is also the way of life that changes our lives.

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Extended Reading

Lilya 4-Ever quotes

  • Lilja: I'm not your property. Think you can buy me? You can't buy me. You can't buy my heart and soul.

  • Lilja: Bye, potato-hag...!