She was a slave girl. In order to escape the fate of being sold off from her parents and husband forever, she fled from the countryside of Maryland to Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. She was accepted and trained by the organization (including changing her a free and western name), resolutely risking a huge Dangerous return home to rescue family and folks. She was affectionately called "Moses", and her fame was so high that the slave owners hated her. However, no matter how much the enemy hates, she can't beat the awakened revolutionaries...Later, when the Civil War broke out, she grew up as a female cadre of the Northern Army, and led the Returning Regiment to participate in the war to liberate more slave brothers...
In the movie, the female pig’s feet held a gun and ordered the former young owner who had been betting on her since childhood to kneel down, realizing the visual trial of the white landlord class; then there is a low-angle shot from the back: the lonely heroine rides her horse towards the depth of field, Jin The yellow sunset portrays her proud silhouette; the final subtitles show: After the success of the revolution, the female pig's feet remarried and married a comrade-in-arms (probably also a black senior officer), and died at the age of 91.
The movie is a political charge, "Harriet" is a 2019 film, but it is estimated that the management and the creative team did not expect that the "black life is expensive" movement would erupt in a few months...
I also never dreamed that Hollywood has been domineering and expanding for decades, and turned around to reach the level of my "seventeen-year movie" [covered face][covered face][covered face]
Uncle Chuan left office today and waved his sleeves without taking away a cloud. Like him?
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