At the end of "Seven Samurai", Kanbei suddenly turned his head meaningfully and stared at the villagers who were singing folk songs and planting rice in full swing, but turned a blind eye to their departure, with mixed feelings on their faces... Not long ago This paddy field is still a battle of life and death. Many people have fallen here. Now that the war has subsided and the threat has ended, everything in the countryside has returned to its former calm, and the sowing season has come again. , and the people who sacrificed for it, there is nothing more important than the happiness that can be seen at the moment, even if it is only a fleeting happiness, life continues, and it is passed down from generation to generation, the closed and stagnant rural society has not been enough for thousands of years. In this way, the cycle of reincarnation in despair and expectation is repeated, but... if it is said that it is because less is not more important, under the high pressure of life and death, it completely liberates itself and devotes itself to the arms of the lover, and after the danger is lifted Then he resolutely gave up this unnecessary dewy relationship. If such a choice is more or less understandable, then the most shocking scene is the appearance of Li Ji in the indifferent and ignorant crowd of villagers. Riki, who fought side by side with all the samurai and experienced many trials of life and death, originally thought that after going through all this, he had surpassed the narrow nature of the small farmer, and finally grew into a Riki with a sense of responsibility and a spirit of responsibility, but in the end he went backwards. Returning to his original self, at this moment, Li Ji happily sang the song of planting rice with his companions, and finally chose to be a farmer who returned to his duty to live the rest of his life in peace. When I saw this scene for the first time, it was really shocking. And I sincerely felt a ray of sadness and loneliness... Kanbei's mood at the moment is probably like this.
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