expel humanity, expel life.

Eve 2022-03-12 08:01:02

Just like driving to the wasteland in the middle of the night a few years ago, in the dark night, only the headlights are left to illuminate one side, there are no crowds, no villages, and the boundless night shrouds people. At that moment you will realize how insignificant human beings are to nature.
The girl in the movie is in the middle of the crowd and faces a desperate situation. As Sartre famously said: Others are hell. The existence of aliens and the concept of contempt for human nature drive out a group of the same kind. Humans have always been divided into good and evil, and they cannot imagine how to avoid, how to face, and how to survive when the world collapses, the world overturns, and hell suddenly comes.
Writing her life with pen and paper, her life is within a square inch, and her life is all written in a diary. I don't know if there are any windows in the concentration camp, but only that diary, which carries hope and temperature, is the only window for the cardamom girl in the prison. The scene of a delicate life struggling to survive in the dark will undoubtedly bring the greatest impact to the audience.

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Extended Reading
  • Modesto 2022-03-16 09:01:09

    Compared to the version in 2009, this version has a lot of perspectives. The characters are more prominent. But all the protagonists are too American, none are Jewish, more like pampered middle-class Americans. I really like the light and shadow of the heroine kissing and the scene upstairs and downstairs.

  • Rupert 2022-03-26 09:01:14

    I remember that my dad had this book in his bookcase and couldn't find it when he moved last year

The Diary of Anne Frank quotes

  • Anne Frank: Our blessed radio. It gives us eyes and ears out into the world. We listen to the German station only for good music. And we listen to the BBC for hope.

  • Margot: Sometimes I wish the end would come, whatever it is.

    Mrs. Edith Frank: Margot!

    Margot: Then at least we'd know where we were.

    Mrs. Edith Frank: You should be ashamed of yourself, talking that way! Think how lucky we are, think of the thousands dying in the war every day, think of the people in concentration camps.

    Anne Frank: What's the good of that? What's the good of thinking of misery when you're already miserable? That's stupid. We're young, Margot and Peter and I. You grown-ups have had your chance. Look at us. If we begin thinking of all the horror in the world, we're lost. We're trying to hold on to some kind of ideals, when everything - ideals, hope - everything is being destroyed. It isn't our fault the world is in such a mess. We weren't around when all this started.

    Mrs. Edith Frank: [sternly interrupting] Now you listen to me...

    Anne Frank: [resumes speaking] So don't try to take it out on us!