Historically, the Balkan Peninsula was at the junction of European Christian civilization and Ottoman Islamic civilization. Ethnic groups and beliefs are mixed here. In Tito's era, the people lived and worked in peace and contentment, and the ethnic group was harmonious. But when Tito died, the power no longer collapsed, and it was unable to suppress all kinds of conflicts. The nation-state sentiment surpassed the friendship of generations of neighbors and socialist sentiments. Yugoslavia was torn apart, and the entire peninsula was in rages. Perhaps the war was due to the intervention of the East and West camps, perhaps it was Raño Tudjman and Milosevic’s politicians who played the national card to win votes, or perhaps it was the evil acts of national extremists. In short, neither side fell. Well, everything pushes everyone's fate into the abyss, division and hatred swallowed up the happiness of an entire generation. This catastrophe, which is tens of thousands of miles away, drips with blood to give people a revelation: you are not living in a peaceful world, you are just living in a peaceful country. The prosperity and tranquility of your current life may be very fragile, and it may be in a blink of an eye. A crisis is enough to force people into the fight for revenge and food (see the siege of Sarajevo during the Balkan conflict). When living and working in peace, people are kind, and the cost of being kind is very low. But it is full of hatred and hatred. Distrust, when food is short, the evil side of human nature will be exposed. Against this background, the film tells a few outsiders' stories. They are UN volunteers who have come to solve the drinking water problem. B, played by Tim Robbins, made up a story full of words (when he encountered a dead cow in the middle of the road, he wrote and directed a landmine plot to scare the innocent French girl Sophie enough), a straightforward and sharp words that hit the point. ("Make a sacrifice, fuck her, for Bosnian people"...), I have to say how gloomy this movie would be without him. In the section of Nicola’s village looking for the rope, the male lead just opened his head and said that there is a rope. He improvised a whole set of Balkan rope production centers. The rope plays an important role in local customs and etiquette, and so on. Nonsense, people can bear to be handsome or not. With such a person by your side in life, you can always have endless bulls and endless bars with him, making the afternoon coffee time full of fun. The male lead is an old handsome Latin man, with a hesitant look in his eyes. His handsomeness led to the old drama between him and Oga Kerui Lancome. His melancholy and vicissitudes echoed the long-term inability of work. His maintenance of a weak sense of justice triggered the story of the interaction between him and Nicola. The various helpless experiences in handling the conflict forced him to accept it stupidly, otherwise the volunteer activities would not continue. He has accepted all kinds of powerlessness in the war zone, at least he and B are no longer furious about this powerlessness, and can also persuade the French honest girl to try to accept it. In the film, you can see the powerlessness of the male protagonist: Nicola's ball was robbed for the first time, and he wanted to help Nicola get back, but those little kids had guns and had to take Nicola away; Check Point clearly watched a row of prisoners of war about to be killed by the militia, but couldn’t do anything, so she turned and left with a smile; in Nicola’s old house, she just wanted to find a rope, but found that Nicola’s parents were hanged. Sophie was frightened by the hanged man and could do anything. It can only hide Nicola. The dead man can be hung out as soon as he finds the rope, but the fucking peacekeepers just said they couldn't, they had to put them back. At the end, I saw that Nicola's football was robbed again. In the end, I couldn't even keep a football of the kid. I really needed to do something, but there was still no way. All these are quite pale and feeble. The tragedy of the people of an entire region, volunteers can actually change very little. This film has actually tried to avoid the blood and cruelty of war. The reality is that during the civil war in Yugoslavia, the peacekeeping forces involved in women’s prostitution, drug trade, and trafficking in human organs and weapons were notorious. In the last few minutes, there was a feeling of suffocation that was depressing and desperate, helpless and hitting walls everywhere, and nothing was resolved. Originally, it was very uncomfortable that the corpse in the well could not be retrieved. Unexpectedly, in the end, even the football of a child, Nicola, would not be able to be saved. So why did TM travel across thousands of rivers to this war zone as a volunteer for peace and justice? ? ! ! When I saw the male protagonist picking up a stone and confronting a few older children, I was desperate. Couldn't I even keep the last bit of justice? Then there was a period when Nicola felt guilty and went to the male lead to explain why he used football for dollars. The protagonist knew that Nicola always wanted to find his parents. He knew that even if he didn't help him, the child would try his best to find his parents. Life and death should be an adult matter, but little Nicola will soon face it. At that moment, I struggled to think about what to do. I was stupid. Did I tell Nicola that my parents were dead, or did I stop him from looking for them? I think the male lead’s response is very reliable. Make sure to let Grandpa accompany him. At least at the moment when he discovers his parents are dead, there is an adult watching him comfort him, so that the little mind will not be completely swallowed before the darkness of death. . The hero is trying his last bit to make Nicola's bleak childhood easier. The director gave a happy ending at the end. Seeing that the prisoners of war who were about to be slaughtered were rescued by the peacekeeping forces; the torrential rain filled the wells, and the floating corpses were picked up by the locals. The atmosphere in the two cars returned to ease. The plot flip is as good as a fairy tale, too good to be false, and I don’t believe it is true. Other movies with similar themes include "The Land of Borders" and "The Land of Blood and Honey." May the tragedy of the civil war in Yugoslavia never happen to us. I can't stand it. In other words, the football is actually pretty good for ten dollars.
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