Translation is a big part of the reason. The key is that I always thought it was a war movie, but later I found out that it was actually just a romance movie. The camera is too protracted, the useless plot will always roll back and forth in various forms, making people feel aesthetic fatigue, and then there is a kind of sadness in the sad tragedy... (= = not how much I said. German films have this strange feature)
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Of course, this film also has a deep impression on me.
Every time the Soviet soldiers went to the widow's house for a party, they would smugly brag about their homeland, and then belittle and ridicule Germany and the Nazis.
The expressions of the women made me sick. They seem to be more intolerant of this insult than men, but in order to survive? Whether it's his own body or the honor or disgrace of the country doesn't seem to matter much.
Their smiles are so bitter.
It reminds me of Lena in "The Good German", that's the kind of human nature. In the face of cruel war, life is the supreme, isn't it? Ethics, morals, people all over the world have forgotten these when the first shot of the war was fired.
As for the Soviet soldiers of XXOO in the Battle of Berlin, it was nothing more than that.
Like we thought they were a bunch of scumbags. (The Führer is shot)
But which "Master of Righteousness and Righteousness" in the war is like this?
The other is the women who are caught between the cracks in the war.
They are not the same as men in their own country who may be threatened with life. As the opposite sex, they have enough conditions to get the sympathy and favor of those foreign opposite sex. But in this way, it just harmed them and made them lose something more precious than life.
The heroine, she succeeded in becoming a powerful and powerful Soviet officer. She was unfortunate and too lucky, and God forbid, she was a gentle man.
In the final ending, (translated at that time...10 sentences only translate 3 sentences...and not even a sentence at all...). It seemed that the Soviet Union was about to leave, and the heroine hugged the Soviet people very sadly and kissed them for a long time.
I was supposed to be with him just to survive, wasn't it?
There is only a simple relationship between them, but it is not love.
Then why is there another kind of reluctance?
Perhaps, this is just the man who left too many memories of 1945.
Finally, in the film, the Soviet soldiers asked the heroine more than once, are you a fascist?
Even suspiciously, do you know what fascism is?
I dare not talk too much about the political system of that era, but anyway, the truth is that in the era of Nazi Germany, every German was a Nazi. (= = It's hard to say if it's fascist~ Ben~)
Maybe they were confused and deceived by the appearance of the outside world, but their most respected leader was Adolf Hitler, and
they still carried the Nazi salute and shouted "heil hitler! "
Don't be hypocritical. Let's not talk about the Nazis and you'll change your mind.
If you really feel that you have done something wrong, don't blame most of your mistakes on your compatriots, on the leaders of the day, on the SS, on the soldiers with the Swastika Iron Cross.
Don't think you were just a common man at the time...trying to get involved with that frenzy era.
~~~~~~~ The last paragraph has nothing to do with the movie itself~~~~~~~~ I just got a little excited when I wrote it here~~~~~~~~~~~~
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