After watching it, I have two deep feelings: one is that the war is far from the cruelty of the front line reflected in other war films, and there are still many factors in the rear that restrict the victory of the war side. The main line of the story is that the male protagonist deals with the war criminals in the deserting camp. Most of these war criminals belong to the deserters on the battlefield. The second is that power can really turn people into another person. When the captain joked that his clothes were also stolen in the prisoner of war camp, other people were surprised, but in the end they laughed it off, because at this time The captain has become the real captain in their eyes. In addition, they need to use his hands to clean up the prisoners of war they think are scumbags (blindly guess that these stubborn prisoners of war are right-wingers).
View more about The Captain reviews