A few years ago, I was very obsessed with World War II. I often studied various sandbox games and watched various documentaries of the classic battles of World War II. The classic World War II movies are not to be missed. Private Ryan", "Blood Battle Hacksaw Ridge", etc., that is, at this time, I learned about the company of brothers.
I'm not proficient in computers. At that time, many American dramas were unwatchable from normal channels, so I bought books and read novels first. But novels are literal things after all, and the actual situation on the battlefield is unimaginable. After reading the novel, I just feel itchy, but I give up because I can't watch it.
By chance this month, I got the link of Brotherhood, and I happily downloaded it to watch it. I only felt that my long-cherished wish for many years had come true, and this so-called most expensive TV series in history did not disappoint.
I think the description of the TV series is real enough. The real war is a hail of bullets and blood and blood. Maybe if you just lift your head slightly when you are prostrate, you will be blown off the sky, maybe you will be blown to pieces when you hide in a foxhole, maybe a nervous comrade will shoot you by mistake, and many comrades will be injured because there is not enough Some people will kill prisoners to vent their hatred, and some people will rape and snatch like invaders after victory. This is a real history. Not every soldier on the battlefield is able to die with composure.
Only by facing history and war squarely can we truly understand the difficulty of peace, avoid over-entertaining war and history, and do not let young people feel that it is cool to kill people on the battlefield. This is the responsibility and obligation of future generations. Obviously we haven't done it yet.
There is a line in Battlefield 1 that I like very much, and I would like to dedicate it to E Company and the soldiers who died in World War II: In this world war, no country can stay out of it, but every time the trigger is pulled, it is a living people. We are those people, we are insensitive, we are innocent; we are worthy heroes and heinous criminals; we are destined to be legends, and we are destined to disappear in history; we are knights in the sky, ghosts in the desert, in the mud Rolling rats, these are our stories.
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