Not to mention, "Inception" was released a little earlier, so I didn't go to the cinema to watch it.
"Interstellar" was the first time I saw a Nolan movie in theaters. I came out of the lively cinema, took the elevator straight down to the first floor, looked at the modern buildings outside the glass, and recalled the farm in the movie. For the first time, I regretted why I didn't study science. At a critical time, I might be able to save the earth.
What struck me was not only the multidimensionality of time and space, but also the divine soundtrack by Hans Zimmer.
And this time "Dunkirk", BGM almost runs through. The music and the plot are perfectly combined. How many times the heartbeat and the music almost synthesize a beat, so nervous that it explodes.
"Dunkirk" is very different from ordinary war films, and Nolan even defines it as a suspense film. Personally, I think it's very appropriate, because it really doesn't look like a war movie.
I was a few minutes late when I entered. After I entered, the protagonist brother saw that the French were burying the body, and he helped the French brother. After that, the two established a profound revolutionary friendship.
The two helped carry the wounded soldiers, mixed into the Highland Corps, and tried every means to get on the boat and escape from Dunkirk.
During this period, the German planes kept dropping bombs downward. The wounded ship that the protagonist brother did not board was blown up, and everyone jumped to escape, while the wounded soldiers lying on the stretcher could not move and could only wait to die. This is the first time. times of despair.
After the wounded ship was sunk, the protagonist brother and the French brother rescued a soldier of the Highland Corps, took the opportunity to infiltrate the Highland Corps, and boarded another ship.
There is food and hot water in the boat, it seems to be safe, but the French guy didn't go into the cabin, maybe because he doesn't speak English, for fear of exposing the fact that he is not British, or because he is afraid that the boat will be sunk, and compare it outside. Safety.
Sure enough, the Germans fired torpedoes and sank the ship. The Frenchman was about to escape, thinking that the protagonist brother and many soldiers were in the cabin, risking their lives to open the cabin and rescue the protagonist brother and his party. It seems that all ships will be sunk, this is the second despair.
The next day, the three protagonists sat on the beach and saw a soldier jump into the sea, accompanied by depressing music, helpless and desperate.
They then followed the Highlander to a stranded fishing boat. I thought I could drive the boat away when the tide was high, but I didn't expect that the German army in the distance was using this boat for shooting practice.
At this time, the human nature was completely revealed, and the French brother became the target of public criticism. Did the Highlanders do something wrong? It doesn't seem to have either.
The ship sank again, despairing for the third time.
Boarding the ship again and again, sinking again and again, the home is across the strait, but it is difficult to touch. At this point despair reached its peak.
This is the perspective of ordinary people in war, despair and helplessness. They don't know the battle situation, the enemy's deployment, or their own deployment. They only know that they have to flee, and their hopes of fleeing have been shattered again and again, and it seems hopeless to return home.
War is not a game and is bound to be accompanied by bloodshed and sacrifice.
My wish is for world peace.
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