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Cathy 2022-03-26 09:01:10
Tame, die.
8.5 points
In the mining area where the class is solidified, the eagle accompanies the boy. The eagle is a symbol of freedom, and the boy is the representative of the loners in the deformed society; the eagle is bound by the ankle, while the child is bound by the solidified class, poverty and...
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Adolf 2022-03-24 09:03:02
child and eagle
It is still the realism of Kenlodge, from the incident of the boy raising the eagle as the main body, which mainly reflects the shortcomings of education, such as authoritative and parental oppressive education. The football game in which the physical education teacher played the referee and the...

Bob Bowes
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Sophia 2022-03-15 09:01:05
Ken Lodge's simple and heavy realism is a classic of British film history. The gloomy greenness permeates every image, and together with the Kestrel, who yearns for freedom and cannot be tamed, stubbornly opposes the spiritual poverty and emotional emptiness of the people at the bottom of the industrial zone. A lot of follow-up long shots, mid-to-long range shots during eagle training. The sad football coach who takes the child out of anger, and the Red Devils by the way. At the end, Buried Eagle handled it with extreme restraint and calmness. (8.5/10)
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Kyle 2022-03-25 09:01:15
A rough glimpse of life from the bottom, documentary-style shooting and unplayed actor performance, presented sharply and sharply without any filters at all, choosing between a real "fact" and a fictional "fiction". In a more naturalistic realism, behind Casper's dirty, embarrassing, and disgusting, stands the class barriers that are unavoidable and insurmountable for generations of high-level bottom and mining families. It's more profound than Black's strength decades later. The relationship between the boy and the eagle is the only part of hope. The statement that the eagle has always been proud and untamable applies to the body and soul that have been disciplined and punished by human nature for thousands of years.
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