"54th Corps, go fix them" Colonel Xiao has a beautiful smile.

Janie 2021-11-14 08:01:25

When the 54th Army, as the advance force, embarked on the journey with the fearless heart of death and glory, the white army who once said to repair the "niggers" cheered and cheered for them. "The 54th Army is going to repair them." I cry a little. Tears were left in this war film.
Major Xiao is really good-looking, and his smile and serious expression are also very moving. I like him from the bottom of my heart.
I am a military blind, and I don't know exactly what the technology is at that time, but compared to the other huge war movies I have seen, I think this may be more real and more moving.

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Extended Reading
  • Hester 2022-03-20 09:01:35

    Glory.1989.PROPER.DVDRip.XviD-FiNaLe

  • Nat 2022-04-23 07:01:43

    The war scene is very magnificent, but I feel that the protagonist Matthew Broderick can't support this white officer. His baby-faced appearance is very interesting, and he plays against Freeman and Washington. It was set off very amateurishly. The final personal sacrifice is also deliberate. Although Denzel Washington in this film uses a consistent routine, it is still very appropriate to the role.

Glory quotes

  • [watching Searles practice with his bayonet]

    Sgt. Mulcahy: Oh, what do we have here? Bonnie Prince Charley and his toy bayonet! You're not reading your books now. Stab me.

    Cpl. Thomas Searles: What?

    Sgt. Mulcahy: Stab-me.

    [Searles comes at him gingerly and Mulcahy slaps it away]

    Sgt. Mulcahy: I said STAB, not TICKLE! Come on, you prissy little schoolgirl! You're the worst soldier in this whole company, now HIT ME!

    [Searles comes at him again, Mulcahy disarms him and slams the rifle butt into his stomach, then his face. Searles falls to the ground, writing in pain and sobbing]

    Sgt. Mulcahy: No shame, son, get up... I SAID GET UP!

    Trip: Nigger forgot to duck, that's all!

    Colonel Robert G. Shaw: Sergeant, deal with that man!

  • Colonel Robert G. Shaw: [writing to his mother, telling her that he's seen his first negroes amongst those fleeing the south] We fight for men and women whose poetry is not yet written but which will presently be as enviable and as renowned as any.