unable to self-depress and depression.
I may forget all the details and plots in this movie, but I will always remember the tearful touching this movie once gave me. I love this movie deeply, and I am obsessed with this movie.
I suddenly remembered these when I was watching this movie, and it seemed that I was suddenly reminded: in a certain corner of the Internet, there will always be a place to pile up those of us who are nostalgic and have leisure, and there will always be someone who suddenly remembers These old movies we love, then tell, and listen. Dear ghost boy, have you seen it; over there, or over here, or over there. There will always be someone remembering, someone waiting and watching. Some images are destined to be immortal, and some sounds will always be remembered by people.
There are miracles in the green. Maybe there is, maybe not. The devout believers who believe in miracles will believe that this is an aura created by God's compassionate love for the world.
The Last Journey, nicknamed the Green Journey's death row, because the floors there are all green. Death row inmates will spend most of their lives in those small cells in District E. The film uses flashbacks to tell the unbelievable scenes of the bleak time on death row, and Paul's memories of District E connect the lives of death row inmates during the Great Depression in 1935. The film is light and gorgeous, sacrificing compactness, sluggish in its own rhythmic, slow tone. We perceive and feel at the speed of it. This is a very egoistic film, which is relatively proactive compared to the current films that are more concerned with the feelings of the audience.
Luxury can be used to describe this movie. The luxury is the extravagant space of the movie. Huaxian is all the details of the movie. It's extravagant, that's how the whole storyline of this movie gives me the overall feeling. Each shot of the film is the exact opposite of this overall feeling. The yellowish-toned shots look thick and full of a touch of sadness. This is the memory of a 108-year-old man 60 years ago, and perhaps, it is precisely because of this that it carries this mildly poignant beauty. Sneaks into the bottom of the film with an almost pathetic tone that gives the film a sublime quality. Luxurious yet unpretentious, heavy and compassionate, all these emotionally incompatible yet complementary stylistic factors make for this timeless classic. Humanistic care and reverence for life are the sympathetic expositions behind the scenes in this film. Except for the guards, everyone in District E will face death without exception. The electric chair, they say it's a murmur of fireworks, but the fireworks are not beautiful or even scary. Whether there is a miracle on the final journey is not really a concern. What I want to see is how to face the inevitable death, and what kind of person will these people who are destined to end their lives here take with them. The expression goes to the end.
May God have mercy on your soul. Side is the last wish that every death row inmate hears before being executed. Atonement, redemption, forgiveness; God's faith tells us that God will forgive all our sins and lead us to heaven if we sincerely repent and pray before we die. So the far side of heaven is always the happiest time we have ever had, beckoning to us from afar. Almost all people devoutly pray for that final redemption, no matter what heinous crime they have committed. Be as calm and peaceful as possible, pious and compassionate. This may also be the last reverence and piety of human nature for life. When he is about to die, his deeds are also good. Why does the appearance of Mr. Ginger the mouse bring everyone in the E area ecstatic pleasure? Because this green land is the final stop of life, and the mouse has found a beginning here. To me, the mice in this movie are not rats, the jailers are not jailers, and the prisoners are not on death row; they are all beings, and everything will receive the awe they deserve.
All beings are equal, and this is where the movie shines the most. Green originally meant life and vigorous vitality. That's what the film is about: the last dignity of life.
John Kefee accomplished his mission by punishing them in his own most extreme way. Their sadism towards life and arrogance in their outlook on life are doomed to their final fate.
John is a sympathetic character. The huge body was scarred, and Melinda once asked him: Who hurt you so deeply. He said he had no memory. Tired and tired face.
How does God do good works? Bear all the guilt and pain of the world and forgive the ignorance and ignorance of Polygonum. John is more like a symbol of mercy projected by God in this world. It is just, whether man can bear what God has endured and perform God's will. When he could perceive sin, he seemed to lie helplessly in the dark and cry. He had wanted to change the past to save everything, but it was always too late to change. There are so many terrible things happening in the world over and over again, and we can't change them.
When he felt overwhelmed, he voluntarily chose to die.
Years later, Paul Ejik's face is still full of tears. And the movie is still inspiring. John said in the only time in his life that he saw a movie and the big screen: that is heaven, and those people are angels without wings. This is probably my favorite line.
Respect for life. May God have mercy on you and my soul. At this moment, I thought, I understood this movie.
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