Norman, who had just joined the army for eight weeks, was pulled out of the car and sent to the front line on the way to the fifth army headquarters to work as a scribe. Everything was wrong, but other teammates told him that the army would not be wrong.
The army can't get it wrong, and neither can war. You're here, it's a done deal, no one cares if it's wrong or right.
Are you a Christian?
I'm.
Which denomination? Anglican? It seems right that you belong to the mainstream church, have you been saved?
I'm baptized
are you saved - until you see...
what?
How cruel people can be.
This line seems to be prophesying, predicting the direction of the story, predicting what war can make people look like, and how ruthless it will be.
There are two sections in the film. When Tang was repairing the camp, the military police caught a prisoner and passed by. Tang desperately chased after him and tried to beat the completely incapacitated Nazi SS in front of him with his fist, but was stopped by a group of people. After being taken for interrogation as if fleeing, Tang turned to Norman and said, "This is the Nazis. If you want to see one and kill another, they will die."
The second was when he encountered two or three teenage children during the march The sneak attack, although Norman saw it in advance, did not shoot because it was a few children. Unfortunately, the children shot and killed their comrades.
This time, Tang's fist hit Norman, and he said while smashing: "Next time I see a German with a weapon, it will be a sieve for me, even if it is a baby with a knife in one hand and a mother's breast in the other! "
I think he said it with sincerity and not anger, war is hysterical, hatred is not moral, no one will abide by any covenant at this time, their only creed is to let their enemies go for this damn war die.
Pete, who plays Don, has seen another of his films -- "Fight Club" -- there's a dual personality in it, and war turns everyone into a dual personality.
After a battle, Tang found a good opportunity for Norman, who was "vulnerable" and had already cried to be useless. They took a captive, a captive with a child and a wife. Although Don knew German, and how soft-hearted it was when the captive knelt down and begged for mercy. Don roughly handed Norman the pistol and told him to kill the captive. Although Norman said no, even if he died, he couldn't do it. But Tang told him that there is no right or wrong here, there are only enemies here, you are here to kill him, they are here to kill you! Then he grabbed Norman's neck, hands, and whole body like kidnapping, and shot and killed the target that helped Norman quickly "enter the role".
Tang was kind to Norman, helped him lift the obstacles in his heart, broke his illusions, and forced the reality to him, letting him know that this was war. Alright this time, you kill the first one, the second one, and the third one, and it's easy.
I feel that the little boys who grow up quickly are often little girls. Norman is in love, and Don finds him a German girl. After forced love and voluntary love, Norman fell in love with the German girl he had just met. But a cannonball...
he's dead, Norman, get back in your tank!
What's wrong with you,
what do you want to do?
Do you have feelings for
marrying her?
Are you an asshole
trying to vent? come!
Damn
it's war! Did you feel it? ! You bastard, get back in your tank! who do you think You Are!
This is war, life is dying, I love you, I just made a plan to marry you, but watching you die in front of my eyes is too late to express my sadness.
At the end there is only one immobile tank and five people left, facing the enemy with a squadron, Don wants to stay and defend this crossroads, the brothers know whether to die or stay with him.
Tang said, this is my home, and he is going to fight his last battle at his home. They should be able to run together and run into the woods. After all, losing a crossroad has a lot to do with the end of the shot, but they don't know. For this endless war, the battle will never end, and people will indeed tire of it.
View more about Fury reviews