What did the war bring

Demond 2022-01-13 08:02:29

Germany and Japan can shoot these wars that bring people reflection, and fight against the war through the cruelty of the war and the loss of humanity.

As a country that has been invaded, which director made such a filming is purely grandstanding. Because as the invaded party, what we should reflect on is not the cruelty of war, but why we are oppressed and invaded.

Here, I have to admire the powerful propaganda machines in Europe and America. Many years ago, I also felt that the war was cruel, and even faintly felt that the civilian soldiers on the aggressor side were also victims, and they were all humans just like us. They have also been devastated by the war.

But we are not qualified to forgive them, those civilians killed by the invaders on Chinese soil, those soldiers who gave their lives to the war. But the invader did not even have the courage to admit it.

Why did Germany behave better than Japan after the war, I think it is not a conscience discovery. The most objective thing is that the Nazis were wiped out cleanly. And Japan—their current regime is almost the same as the regime during the war.

I am opposed to war, but I am not afraid of war.

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Extended Reading
  • Viva 2022-03-21 09:02:50

    The battle of Stalingrad, shot from the German perspective, has anti-war sentiments throughout the film. Most of the one million dead on both sides of the Soviet Union died of starvation. The street battle tank battle scene is cruel, the two sides truce to pick up the bodies, squeeze the last plane, the carpenter boy, the mixed-race woman, the warm and comfortable seashore at the beginning, and the snowy field at the end, which is a tragic work.

  • Al 2022-03-26 09:01:11

    There is no strategizing of the battle, no scheduling of the big scene, just the fate of a team in Stalingrad, and the interspersed narrative in the first half is even a bit scattered. The second half of the journey home was truly thought-provoking. They encountered cruel weather, betrayal of ideals, separation of their families, and ultimately lost their lives, but no one knew the meaning of all this.

Stalingrad quotes

  • General Hentz: To sum it up, gentlemen... we're in deep shit.

  • Fritz Reiser: They say in Germany when you die as a soldier you are honored. That's something, isn't it? Siberia? Not for me. I'm cold enough.