There is a passage in the film that impressed me very much. The gunmen in Room 3 said that they needed to exchange women for food.
1. Uncle Mark (the doctor) said to his wife: If you go (slavery), of course it will hurt my dignity, but at this moment, dignity is useless at all, you should have your own choice. After all, if you don't go, we'll starve to death. The hostess was speechless.
2. But the Japanese boy said to his wife unequivocally: I don't allow you to go. On the contrary, Japanese girls feel that men and women should be equal, and he should not interfere with his own choices.
As a girl, I hope that in desperate situations, boys can protect me. Even if I have this kind of devotion, he should try his best to stop me. It's a big deal to fight those tyrants! Don't be afraid. What's more, there is a heroine who can be seen here. So I think what Uncle Mark does inside will make the heroine completely chill.
But it seems that I think too much. As a down-to-earth Chinese, the cultural and ideological differences between the East and the West may be like this. What I think is incredible may be just a trivial matter to Westerners, and they don’t care at all.
Therefore, in the end, the male protagonist and the female protagonist are still very warm together and applaud for love.
In the end, at the end of the montage, I really don't understand, is the heroine blind or not?
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