It just so happened that I was listening to the little prince recently. Only by looking carefully can we see the truth of things, the most important truth that is invisible to the naked eye. The scene of missing is very calm. The opening sentence is very classic. It comes from the real story archives. While Missing protects the characters in the real incident, it also protects the film itself (the United States really dares to shoot anything). Missing has been implying that the United States has participated in its own interests. The Chilean coup even signed an agreement with the brutal Nazi-like military government that would kill Americans by default. There are nowhere to put corpses, hospitals, streets, and even riversides. I think of the massacres for profit in the blood diamonds, and the Hutu and Tutsi massacres in the Rwandan restaurant. A country needs to have the rule of law, but the interference of a powerful country in a weak country is really too cruel. You can refer to the conflicts between India, South Korea and North Korea, Hutu and Tutsi in Rwanda, and so on. I hope that the motherland will grow stronger. The lens sense and story type of the movie itself reminded me of Eastwood’s suspicion of changing children, and I will never forget the little boy who drinks milk. The stubborn father changed his view of Lis and his son, thinking that she was one of the bravest people he had ever talked about, and at the same time changed his inherent perception of his son. Lis is really brave, and his father has also changed his own perception of his son, but Charlie and the people who died innocently in the coup in Chile will never come back.
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