Czech car bomber

Dallas 2022-01-20 08:01:43

Watching this movie is actually a whim, that is, when the forehead is hot and say okay, then go, when the guy in the dormitory opposite suggested to go to the department building to watch a movie tonight. I just didn't expect that my own whim accidentally coincided with the state of the male protagonist or most of the characters in the film. As the director of the Czechs, his evaluation of the Czechs is "something that only smirks", and their lives are indeed a lot of joy. Whether it is the great-grandfather who hypnotized the tanks of Nazi Germany in the narration of the family history of the male protagonist at the beginning of the film, or the female civil servant of the railway station whose hips were knocked on by someone, they laughed so unforgettable. It is hard to imagine that they were in a state of being invaded and enslaved at this time. Their country, the Czech Republic, no longer exists. Comparing the Chinese people's anti-oppressive struggle, you will find that the Czech people are too temperamental. If it is serious, it means that they have too little national backbone. Anyway, you have to take up arms to resist, instead of trying to hypnotize tanks to resist the attack. No, these ordinary Czechs in the film did not resist. They are still alive and optimistic, smiling stupidly, they are in a personal state of existence. It can be said that caring for individuals is the characteristic of the Czech nation that has penetrated into its bones. Therefore, they have gone a long way on the road of thinking and exploring personal living conditions. Kafka and Milan Kundera are examples. The male protagonist without a strong collective consciousness would naturally go to work at the train station. He did not consider whether the station was for German aggression or revolutionary struggle. He just put on a uniform and a hat to go to work. Yu has a relationship with the conductor girl on the train. He is personal. Even if he went to bomb the train at the end, he did not think that this was contributing to the cause of revolution and liberation. His decision was simple. His lustful colleague smiled and said to him that we would blow up the German military train. Just in that clearing, he smiled and replied, okay, let's go bomb it. He didn't seem to realize what he was doing. To be sure, he did not realize this. This can be proved by jumping up and waving his hands after he dropped the bomb. If he knew what he was doing, he would not stand up and celebrate like this after dropping a bomb, and he would not be killed by a machine gunner hidden on the train. He didn't know what he was doing. He just blew up the train with his teammates after his head was hot. He only knew that he was very happy to do so. This is undoubtedly a manifestation of the national characteristics of the Czech Republic.
The male protagonist in the film has a growth process. The male protagonist, who was troubled by premature ejaculation, was depressed and committed suicide by cutting his wrist in the bathroom of the brothel. After being rescued, he followed the doctor’s advice in an attempt to regain the man’s self-confidence. The crack in the upper part) is no less than the one left by the horny colleague. He has indeed regained his self-confidence and completed the so-called coming-of-age ceremony. From this point of view, the revolution has given him new life. At the same time, after a night of passion, the female guerrilla left behind the bomb that bombed the train, and it was this bomb that destroyed him. It can be said that life is revolution and death is revolution. If you think about it, this may be the director's reaction to the revolution. Irony.
I didn't want to write it when I wrote this. I never expected to write this during the fixed time period when I should call her. It was a whim. I wonder if you will see this awkward text, Kiki?

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Closely Watched Trains quotes

  • Milos Hrma: Great grandfather Lukas instead of staying home he went to see the workers and made fun of hard working men, so every year grandpa Lukas would get beat somewhere. And in 1930 great grandfather boasted in front of stone cutters whose quarry had just been closed and they beat him so badly he died.

  • [first lines]

    Milos Hrma: My name is Milos Hrma. People often laughed at my name. But ours was a famous family. Great Grandfather Lukas was a drummer and fought on the Charles Bridge in Prague. The students threw cobblestones at the soldiers and hit Grand Grandfather so hard that he was pensioned off on one gulden a day. He didn't do anything after that except buying a bottle of rum and a pack of tobacco every day.