Let physical education teachers teach Chinese

Roger 2022-04-19 09:02:43

"Hitler's Boys" is a down-to-earth film full of natural emotions.

Anti-Nazi is not the purpose, and anti-Nazi, anti-fascist should not be the purpose of any work. Because when you intend to attack a thing, you will inevitably make yourself narrow-minded, and will inevitably make yourself deliberately downplay some commonalities and elements that should not be attacked. The wise approach is to analyze it comprehensively, without covering it up, without any bias. When the truth is presented calmly in front of people's eyes, it will automatically receive healthy effects.

Poet and boxer, what a classic combination. The beauty of the poet boy in the film is also otherworldly. The banality of the boxer's eyes is even more intriguing. The scene of the two of them crying on the ground is the ultimate expression of natural emotion.

If the poet drowns, the only shot left to the audience is the boxer looking down from the ice sheet, it will be more impactful, because it is more real. But in that way, how many sensitive and fragile hearts will suffer lasting damage... So leaving the drowning poet in the perfect frame and drifting away, this poetic farewell scene will not make the audience so uncomfortable.

"Suicides who choose to drowning, only water is worthy of the depth of their souls." - "Complete Suicide Manual" Japan

Also, let the physical education teacher teach the language, maybe there will be a fair and good result. "Real athletes dare to tell the truth." Why? Because being in good health provides people with the most basic self-confidence, once they are self-confident, they will not always want to avoid them.

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Extended Reading

Before the Fall quotes

  • Christoph Schneider: Pull yourself together!

    Albrecht Stein: Pull myself together? Do you know what we just did? You shouldn't have shot! You shouldn't have shot!

    Tjaden: I didn't give the order. Your father said they had guns!

    Albrecht Stein: Why are you looking at me like that?

    Friedrich Weimer: I'm not looking at you.

    Albrecht Stein: I know what you're thinking. Don't look at me like that!

  • Albrecht Stein: [reading from his essay] "As childish as it sounds, the winter time and the sight of freshly fallen snow always fill us with inexplicable joy. Perhaps because as children, we associated it with Christmas. I always imagine myself the hero who killed dragons, rescued virgins, and freed the world from evil. As we went out yesterday to find the prisoners, I felt like that little boy who wanted to save the world."

    Vogler: Albrecht, stop.

    Albrecht Stein: But as we returned, I understood that I am part of the evil that I wanted to save us from.

    Vogler: Albrecht, stop.

    Albrecht Stein: Shooting prisoners is wrong. They were not armed, as Governor Stein told us, to incite us. We didn't shoot men, only children.

    Vogler: Out!