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Winnifred 2022-04-24 07:01:20
believe and believe
Innocent people can believe something so easily, and only pure people can be so inspiring.
The last time I saw such a belief in reality was in Tibet. That pure faith, pure belief.
Before that, I thought that the world was completely dark, and there was no place for people who didn't believe in...
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Milo 2022-04-19 09:02:42
little boy
In the film, it is emphasized that people must have faith. Just like Pepper, in the face of his brother's questioning and humiliation, he tried his best to use his mind to move the distant mountains, not only for himself, but also for Mr. Hashimoto, who was discriminated against by the residents of...

Jill Kelly
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Kade 2022-03-20 09:02:33
Sometimes I like this kind of more vulgar things. The process of watching the movie is like watching this year's "Young Spicer's Journey". The interspersed elements of magician, western and samurai are very lovable, making the entire movie a fairy tale. "He is my friend" The elimination of prejudice is sometimes just a sentence, a "little boy" really ended World War II. "Despair makes it easy for people to have faith, but it takes courage to believe."
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America 2022-03-28 09:01:08
Don't like war themes about kids/family.
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Fr. Crispin: If we have faith the size of a mustard seed, we can move the mountain. If we can move a mountain, nothing will be impossible for us. Not even with ending this war... and having our love one back.
Ben Eagle Narrator: [thinking of the magician he had seen] I already knew someone who could move a mountain. I wondered if the source of his powers was the mustard seed.
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[first lines]
Ben Eagle Narrator: [narrating] This is O'Hare, California. Back then it was nothing more than a sleepy fishing village, with a hill at the end of Main Street. Like you see in postcards. My story takes place on the home front, in the midst of World War II. That's me, the little fella.
Photographer: [motioning to the youngest]
Little Boy: Closer?
Freddy Fox: [ribbing him] Stop causing trouble, you midget.
Ben Eagle Narrator: Nobody in that town liked me much.
Photographer: One, two, three.
[flash]
Ben Eagle Narrator: I was eight years old. But the story really starts the day I met my dad. My only friend. My partner.
Nurse Barbara: He's a boy!
James Busbee: Wow! He's so...
Nurse Barbara: What? Little?
James Busbee: Well, he'll grow. Right?