Time flies for so many years, and movies with similar themes are rarely seen, but recently I was lucky to see this film on CCTV 6 sets, which is also digging the tunnel. The background of the film is the First World War. The protagonist of the story is a miner from Australia. He travelled across the ocean to the war-torn European continent and participated in the largest war in the world at that time. His mission It is to make use of his expertise to start an underground war a few meters or even tens of meters below the position where the enemy and us are facing each other. The director took the story to the war-torn battlefield without much preparation. The rainy position was filled with mud and noisy, and there was the roar of artillery fire and the screams of artillery shells falling into the trenches at any time. Entering the tunnel forms a huge contrast with the outside world. The narrow and dark tunnel stretches vertically and horizontally underground. In the tunnel where you can't see your fingers, candles become the only light source, and the birds in the birdcage in your hands are often these soldiers. Our only partners, in such a cramped and confined space, sometimes you can hear your own heartbeat quietly here. What these soldiers have to face is environmental depression, psychological loneliness and fear, and Face the fierce flames that your opponent’s colleagues may dig into your tunnel at any time. While describing the cruelty of the battlefield, the director interspersed the footage from time to time back to the actor's hometown, where he described his past before he came to join the war, and that there was such a good girl waiting for her in that remote place.
Gradually, the location of the story has shifted to the location of the film’s title "60 Heights". The actor's side is preparing to launch an unprecedented large-scale blasting of the German positions on "60 Heights". Countless explosives were buried in the German army through the tunnel. Below the position. After solving the drainage problem in the tunnel, it only waited for a large number of German troops to be stationed into the position. Everything was not as smooth as expected. The tunnel masters in the German army were about to see through their plan. After a tunnel assault resolved this hidden danger, the time for the final explosion finally arrived, with a loud noise. The actor closed the switch of the largest blast in human history. The enemy's position and a young comrade-in-arms were blown into the sky with this loud noise. As soon as the camera turns, he returns to his hometown, puts on a shirt that symbolizes honor, and enters the palace of marriage with his beloved Keren. The footage of the film was finally frozen in a photo of him with a group of Paoze.
This is a film adapted from a real story, which allows me to see more intense, exciting, and larger-scale tunnel wars in European battlefields thousands of miles away, interspersed with intense battles, long before our war of resistance. The warm story from the hometown in between makes the film very shrinking. Through this method, the director conveys the huge contrast between war and peace to all the audience through the lens. I have to say that this is an excellent piece of long insight. Movie.
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