What you die for can live by

Amelia 2022-10-31 00:28:46

When I first watched "Goodbye in the Sky", I couldn't let go of the ending for a long time. I expected to see hugs and reconciliation, but I only got a jump in exchange.

After completing the interview with COLCOA French Film Festival today, I found that the film adaptation has done its best to make up for the regrets and pains in the original work. For example, the resistance to patriarchy: the father always hated and alienated Edward because he was gay, and eventually crushed him to death under the wheel, and changed to Edward but wished to calm himself down; for example, advanced feminism: Edward's sister's infatuation from the original book Women, turned into ruthless characters who turned the lieutenant into a reproductive tool; such as yearning for a bright future: a hopeful ending without Edward. I found comfort in my heartbreak again.

Edward fought all his life, all his life.

He fought against his father who made a fortune in the war with his own devotion to the war, with his extraordinary creations against the people who are more sinister than guns and guns, and against the senseless war launched by the fame-seekers with the non-existent hero monument.

"Resistance" is the whole meaning of supporting him to live. What you die for can only live by.

When the war that buried thousands of lives is over, when the wicked leader receives the retribution he deserves, when his father recognizes him and repents to him, everything he resisted will return to dust, and all the grudges and grievances are over, he is finally calm, proud, Resolute turned into a blue bird and jumped down, free from the torture of endless morphine pain relief and injection feeding.

He spent his whole life waiting for this day, and one day to finish this life.

This is the freedom he seeks, and he is entitled to it.

&

Teacher Na's slender, fragile, fragile, and incomplete beauty is a fatal attraction to me. Even if there is no line in the whole process, just a pair of blue eyes can capture the soul?

View more about See You Up There reviews