I started watching this movie two weeks ago. After watching the first time, too many emotions accumulated in my heart. In my life 73 years ago, it was completely impossible for me to have a different feeling. The cruel war stripped off all the masks and labels from people. In the most difficult times, people supported each other, faced death together, accepted hardship together, and then became brothers.
One year of war makes people feel that they have spent so long a lifetime. It is impossible to imagine the soldiers who spent the civil war, the eight years of resistance against Japan, the Liberation War, and the War of Resistance against U.S. Aggression and Aid Korea. I don’t know what their memories and hearts are like, but it is a pity that they are shrouded in a magnificent halo. Next, these inner stories may not have a chance to be understood by others.
Because of face blindness and the coming and going of warriors in the same costumes, the first time I didn’t figure it out, maybe I only remember winters, so after doing a little homework, I watched it again, and finally no longer in the clouds. . But it's a pity that I can no longer be immersed in the atmosphere of that war, accompany to charge, hide in foxholes, treat the wounded, and die for every soldier who sacrificed, and I didn't seem to spend my life when I saw it for the first time. Of heaviness. Thinking of myself, I always feel that a lot of life might be better if you live it again, but how can you be better? Know everything and spend your life relaxedly, it doesn’t seem to count, the process of struggling from 0 to 1 belongs to Own experience.
I like winters very much. In fact, except for Dyke, Sauber, the first company commander, and those officers, I like every soldier and every child of E Company.
The fifth to seventh episodes are my favorite. The war has entered the middle and late stages. The long war has made every soldier used to it. Charges, defenses, bloody deaths, and hiding in foxholes seem to be normal every day. People still have their own hesitation, entanglement, passion, humor, and pride in the beacon fire, just like all good brothers chatting after meeting together.
So I like movies like this. Stripped off the cloak of grand historical events, the subject becomes the joy, sorrow, sorrow and joy of each individual.
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