This movie should have been seen during the monthly vacation and wanted to watch it until it was delayed until some time ago. Everyone thought it was a movie, but it was actually a documentary. Very impactful. Although it was filmed in 15 years, this kind of cultural backwardness is really more serious than I thought. I know that North Korea is quite backward in urban development, but the backwardness is really far beyond my imagination, so after watching this documentary, I went to look for some videos about North Korea. Although I always felt very familiar when I watched it, such as their young pioneers, the content taught in the class (actually it is quite similar to what we have in a certain subject textbook in our high school), and there are big heads of great people everywhere. It's a damn familiarity, but I'm glad there are still many differences in this familiarity. What impressed me the most is that there are two places, the first is how the local government officials instructed the little girl's family to "act" me in the documentary. It's really ironic, and I keep saying this line. The line says that our country is very good. Okay. Even lying in bed and sleeping have to perform. Acting like their country is very happy and happy. It's really like the kingdom of heaven a hundred years ago, even though it's already a rotten body, it's still immersed in this beautiful dream and can't wake up. Another one is that in the last scene, the little girl cried and made her think of something happy, but she couldn't think of it. After that, she recited a string of praise for the great man. I originally called him the recitation template. (Generally, I don't want to be interviewed?) I seem to have seen what the Cultural Revolution looked like at the time, but the Cultural Revolution was not awakened, unconscious. Recently, I was reading Mo Yan's "Fatigue of Life and Death," which was about the Cultural Revolution. It's hard to read, but I can see how ignorant and terrible people were at that time. When there is only one sober person, then this sober person is the target of the blow. This made me think that although Lin Zexu was historically known as the first person to see the world with his eyes open, he read the world in a private letter with a friend. This is not only the weakness of the literati, but also the oppression of the sober people by the society at that time. Just like the heinous behavior of the Red Guards in Yu Hua's "Brothers". It was enough to reflect the fog of the society at that time that people lost their judgment on what was ahead, and it was Deng Xiaoping who cleared the fog. I always think that Deng Xiaoping is the greatest person (without stepping on it) who pulled China out of it. If there was no reform and opening up (of course, if we were talking about the villagers of Xiaogang Village), maybe China has nothing to do with North Korea now. Make a difference. The most terrifying thing is the imprisoning of thought. In history, there were literary prisons, eight-legged writing, and the removal of a hundred schools of thought that revered Confucianism. . It makes people inactive and becomes a machine that can only set formulas. Why was the Tang Dynasty so prosperous, the enlightened policy opened up the social environment. I always thought Tang Dynasty The culture is the brightest, I love its openness and respect for women. (I won't talk about the Neo-Confucianist of the Song Dynasty, who imprisoned women and advocated the elimination of human desires and eventually became the three cardinal guides and five constants that control women.) How important is an open cultural environment to the development of a country. (
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