Russian film, based on the well-known battle story of the Soviet Union. Looking at the name, it should be similar to China's "Five Heroes of Langya Mountain". After watching "Blood Battle Hacksaw Ridge", the scenes of this low-cost World War II film are naturally not comparable, but it also has its moving points. Compared with the usual American movies where people yell and swear on the battlefield, all the soldiers in this movie seem unusually calm. If you have a cigarette, you can smoke two, those who have religious beliefs pray silently, and the rest are quietly waiting for their fate. There are not too many rhetoric, there is no usual routine of caring for relatives at the end of the day or missing his wife and children, and he does not tell some bad jokes or dirty jokes. A speech under the cold moonlit night before the decisive battle was very sad to hear. Watching the entire movie, none of the heroes are particularly dazzling. Except for the last instructor who looked a bit like a curly blessing and hung up for a minute. Whether the Russian army or the German army, most people are shot to death, and many people are in a fighting posture when they die. One soldier stopped moving, and the other picked up his gun and put it on top. There was no footage or words to confirm life and death. The realistic style highlighted the cold-blooded and ruthless war. It's a heroic movie, but more like a holistic portrait of all beings, in the tradition of the Soviet collectivist stream of consciousness that we are familiar with. The shroud is the fate of the soldiers, and they represent the spirit of guarding the last line of defense to the death. "Although Russia is big, there is no way out, and Moscow is behind it." The soundtrack of Lao Maozi's movie is quite powerful, and the battle BGM in the last ten minutes is worth repeating.
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