I don't understand the local customs and culture of South American countries, as well as their basic national conditions, so I cannot have a deep understanding of certain elements conveyed by the film. I only express what I perceive.
Rather than saying that these seven children are rebels, I would rather treat them as children who have not been properly guided, and children who gradually return to their own nature. Why did their captain commit suicide? Is it the humiliation of seeing a cow that should be guarded by oneself after being skinned and shaved? Or was it because he couldn't face his superiors and subordinates? But anyway, he is weak. The role of Lady was later revealed by the officer's question,'She is a bitch, a bitch of power. 'Although she didn't admit it, she acted very honestly. The last shot of her in the film was pointing a gun at a child hiding under the table. I hope that the next shot is beautiful. Other children have also found their own nature one after another, but no one is listed, none of them is guided by some military regulations or the like.
There are still many things, I don't want to describe them one by one, because my real movie-watching experience is silly and boring throughout the whole process. Maybe it's just because I can't empathize.
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