Everyone has their own reasons for fleeing, for freedom, for the homeland, for faith....
I like Jim Sturgess to look through his album, because of a comment to see This movie.
A long and tasteless journey, and 2 hours became meaningless. Like no despair and no hope. I always knew that the protagonist would survive, and it was not thrilling, and death seemed to be a matter of course. I I have been guessing how thrilling or moving this last scene will be. Maybe under such a theme, what I get should be hope. Then the survivors finally walked through this difficult journey and gained freedom. Maybe Support me to keep watching and not fast forward just because I don't want to endure the so-called mentality that I haven't seen the whole movie. No
faith, no doctrine, no history.
Only after seeing Janusz on the edge of the desert to Mister "But she'll never be able to forgive herself for what she's done. You see, only I can do that. She will be torturing herself, just like you. So you see, I have to get back. I-have-to -get-back."
At the beginning of the film, his wife was crying. I was wondering if I had blamed his wife for resentment, which sent up a road of no return, suffering and grief that he saw. But he struggled Thousands of miles, but for forgiveness. In
the last few minutes of the film, he has been walking, as he said, keep walking. Through the victory of the anti-fascist war in Europe, through the Soviet Union's communist rule in Poland, through the Eastern European Iron Curtain Down, through the collapse of communism in Poland, through the liberation of Poland. After
fifty years, finally came to his wife.
No one can forgive you, and you can't forgive yourself.
You see, only I can do that.
So you see, I have to get back.
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