Half a century of conflict on the Korean peninsula is the sacrifice of great powers.
Unite? It only takes a generation for this local new patriotism to replace the unification zeal it originated from, as is the case on the Korean peninsula, China, Hong Kong, Macao and Taiwan.
In an anti-war film, what I feel is the thorn-like animality of living.
Do your best to survive.
Mu Xin, in the catastrophe, is also like this.
Survival is the most optimistic and most reproductive instinct performance.
So, this is a rough chicken soup movie.
Stimulate the weak and the strong, try to climb the upper reaches of the food chain, because the fate of the downstream chess pieces is the most unfortunate.
Finally, a digression:
I personally like movies and historical materials about the Pacific War very much. Due to the political system in our country, there is no such movie to watch, which is really a pity.
View more about The Front Line reviews