This movie expresses a lot. It has a blade in its romance, ice in its warmth, and pity and irony in its black humor, but it does not express the slightest homosexuality!
What's the point of those who are leading the charge? I don't know, I just feel very sad, and I dare to say a lie but say it's true, and I am a little scared!
But this drama is really worth watching. It is very anti-war. It does not simply or rudely say that Jews are pitiful and Nazis are hateful, but from the side of the story, it uses people's instinctive desires and the suppression and deterioration of human nature to be as true and detailed as possible. Reflecting on this dark age of history, using Nazi wishes dashed and Jewish wishes come true to imply that the war of inhumanity will end, the story itself is moving.
In order to learn Persian, an officer went to his brother to repeatedly use his power to save a Jew who pretended to be a Persian. He didn't even care about his reputation. If he could become a captain, he must have a certain city. After that, he was incompetent to the assistant. The calculation can prove it, but why does he easily believe an impostor? Not only is Du witty, but in many cases it is because his eagerness to realize his desire to go to Tehran to find relatives and open a restaurant is too strong, and his emotions drag him to run and fall behind. In the end, the corporal's puzzled expression after being reprimanded for wanting to report "disciplinary behavior" is very interesting. There must be something in his heart that is disintegrating and collapsing. There's a lot of tension in the part where the officer keeps repeating his name and why you don't understand.
Many people among the Nazis are pushed away. Human evil is like a snowball. It can be pushed forward and roll forward, and then roll bigger and bigger until the sun comes out and dissolves it. What is that sun? Stand up and fight, and use war to overcome war in exchange for peace. Sometimes this is not the case. This paragraph is what I personally think.
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