The classic film "Saving Private Ryan" directed by Spielberg is set during World War II during the Normandy landings of the American army. After three of Private Ryan's older brothers died in World War II, Army Headquarters dispatched an eight-man team to find Private Ryan who had landed incorrectly and bring him home. Although this mission was successfully completed and successfully brought Ryan back to the United States, the eight-man squad has been fragmented. Captain Miller died in this action.
What moved me most in this film was its depiction and rendering of war. At the beginning, the US military had just approached the beach by boat. German bullets roared in. The war is really a waste of life. Wherever the bullets are drawn, there is a sea of blood. Before going to the battlefield, perhaps you were a social elite, or an ordinary person; a scientist, a movie star, or a teacher. On the battlefield, you are nothing but flesh and blood. You'll bleed if a bullet hits your body, and you'll die if a cannonball hits you.
On the battlefield, someone's arm was blown off, and he used his left arm to pick up the right arm on the ground; someone's intestines were shaken out by the artillery fire, and he stuffed the intestines into the body with his hands; someone shouted before dying My mother, the first sentence of birth is mother, and the last sentence of death is also mother.
World peace, world peace, this is what we usually talk about. Perhaps only those who have truly witnessed the war and experienced the fall of their comrades one by one can cherish it from their hearts.
May, world peace is more than just a slogan.
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