After watching this movie, I didn't know what to say, whether it was unacceptable or shocking to the meaning behind the movie. I have seen a lot of movies, and there are a lot of movies that resonate, but there are very few movies that can really touch the soul, but this pianist has done it.
I have seen a movie about the Nazi massacre of Jews before - The Boy in Striped Pyjamas, but the latter is more from a child's point of view, even if the final ending is so obscure. The former is different, everything happened so suddenly and directly, just like you didn’t expect that the Nazis would easily push a disabled old man downstairs and play the game of hunting happily. He realizes what it means to be like a mustard, and is at the mercy of others but is powerless to resist.
The male protagonist is a lucky person. He is one of the few who survived, but he is undoubtedly a tragic character, separated from his relatives, tragically killed by his friends, unable to love, and endured year-round hunger and cold. In the beginning, he was so high-spirited and then he hid like a beggar, but the drastic changes in his life did not change his dedication to music and his dignity. When I saw him in the end card smiling confidently in front of the piano again, I smiled, I was really happy for him, and he became that him again.
The scene that impressed me the most in the whole film is that every time he looks at the outside world in front of the window, the window keeps changing and the scene keeps changing, but the eyes that yearn for peace remain the same.
Movies have given me more of my own view of what is called good and evil. Many people have a deep impression of the officer who saved Spearman, and a person who was kind in our subjective consciousness could only die tragically in a German prisoner of war camp, and such people are by no means rare. And the male protagonist, or the persecuted Jews, are absolutely kind? I don’t think so. In order to save their own lives, they can kill their compatriots or turn a blind eye to the plight of others, so many times our Good and evil are only relative, and it is enough to have a clear conscience.
I think this movie is better than its realness. It is so real that it makes people doubt their worldview countless times, but they have to tell themselves that everything that happens in the movie is real. Many people use it in the barrage. From his own perspective of God, he made various conclusions to many innocent and helpless people in the play, saying "mourning what happened, angering what he did", "who is to blame for such cowardice of our own nation", but please ask yourself, in such troubled times , How do you want them to resist in an era when everyone is trying to save their lives and make a living? You can sit in front of the screen and say irresponsibly that you have to resist in order to survive, but the truth is, can these Jews do it, and can their resistance make any difference? Some people are thinking about how To resist, some people think about how to survive and some people may think about how to make a fortune, but all this is just because each person has his own aspirations, and perhaps we are not qualified to judge that era.
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