It seems that many films you watch are like prose. There is no backbone and no ups and downs. You don’t know why there is such a plot, but it won’t work if you don’t, because people live like this, except for what they want to do. There are things that must be done and things that are not necessary but must be done, such as little boys and friends to spy on men and women.
Through the little boy, he explained the environment and characters at that time. The seemingly pure and precocious child ended up screaming at the teacher he liked, cursing words that he didn't understand, and struggling to smash the stones that he bent over and picked up with many children.
I don’t know where the children’s anger comes from at that time, and what the teacher’s mood is. But at this time, the civil war has just begun. Many feelings will be wiped out by fear. The child may be angry because of fear, and the teacher will be less afraid. Some, but it must be sad and calm. The teacher is respected and respected. He will lose his wife when he is about 20 years old. “In short, he will live his life alone.” He will probably guess when he will be persecuted. A person is vomiting by a pillar. I always think that vomiting is a symbol of a person’s collapse. It does not mean vomiting when the body is sick, but includes vomiting after being drunk. For example, in "Brokeback Mountain", when Ennis can only part with Jack, a person is holding on to the wall and vomiting again and again in pain. When the person is extremely sad and collapsed, it is a normal physiological reaction for the stomach to turn to Haiti and want to vomit.
So the teacher will be afraid, sad, heartache, and give up. He doesn't know whether his final peace is discouraged or patience, but the ending is tacitly understood by us, but the children don't know.
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