Much of the film's comments focused on bashing the heroine's "resistance to the end" statement after the Japanese emperor announced her surrender. In fact, I think that substituting into it is actually the heroine's accusation of wasting time and losing everything, and it is the out-of-control spread of emotions, not the clamor of militarism. In addition, looking at the essence through phenomena, the heroine's father participated in the design of military aircraft, her sister joined the army support group, her husband joined the navy, and the relatives and neighbors around her "survived" in various ways, consciously or unconsciously. to support the continuation of the war. Bullets produced by workers in factories are indiscriminately shot at soldiers and civilians of other countries by militarism. When an avalanche hits, no piece of snow is innocent. In the end, when the atomic bomb exploded in the heroine's hometown, scholars, peasants, businessmen, and industries, no matter what class, could not escape the combined sanctions...
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