When the movie entered the prisoner of war camp that was detained by the Japanese army, my mood instantly rose, the Japanese prisoner of war camp, what kind of purgatory-like existence is that, and the scalp is numb just thinking about it.
And then Watanabe came out with a stick, Nani? Is he going to hit the prisoners with a stick? This style is very familiar.
Such sticks, such lectures, such eyes, there are also exactly the same scenes in the anti-aircraft guns of the men shot by the Japanese themselves.
Under the comprehensive brainwashing of militarism in World War II, in order to build a strong fighting force, the Japanese army pursued a strict hierarchy and a harsh punishment system. The officer in the picture above is holding a navy spirit injection stick, a one meter long. The wooden stick, as long as you see a slight error in the soldiers, it is a love education, which injects abundant naval spirit into the grassroots soldiers.
Back in the movie, he continued to receive stick education, and the torture of corporal punishment was still unyielding. Finally, Zamperini, who was known as indestructible, was the standard of the old Japanese naval boot camp. He should be very fortunate that he was sent to the most gentle and sweetest prisoner of war camp in Japan.
During World War II, the most cruel and inhumane place was the Japanese POW camp, if you were lucky enough to survive in the POW camp after surrendering. The logic of such no lower limit itself is based on the premise that the officers in the Japanese army have already treated their soldiers inappropriately as human beings.
After reading it, I can't laugh or cry. Putting aside the historical dimension and describing the situation at that time with the standard of today's eyes, I can only move myself.
View more about Unbroken reviews