I always thought that Klaus would only make a fool of himself in the end. At most, in a foreign land in Tehran, he hated himself for believing in a sly Jew, and bitterly recalled the past. When finally Klaus was arrested in anger, fear, and unwillingness, a thorn pierced my throat so deeply that I couldn't swallow or even breathe.
Reason tells me that it was not Reza who betrayed Klaus, but Klaus' arrogance and arrogance, but I can't help but recall his shyness when talking about love, his longing for praising Persian, and reading his own writing by the window The innocence of Persian poetry, and the sincerity of trusting him in protecting Reza at the risk of perhaps not even one ten thousandth of a Jewish but still life-threatening risk.
I understand that the pain of Klaus being betrayed is less than that of the Jews, and his final death was only because of his blind help, but I still cry in pain at this moment. Because the director cunningly let all of us witness his feelings, so that we have no way to point the hatred of World War II to the Germans, or even a German officer. Under the guidance of the director, we hated the real culprit-war.
I also understand that Klaus and Reza have no real friendship. They are torn apart by the war, and all their love will turn into knives and stab themselves. Will Reza be in love with Klaus, no, he will never Don't dare to have a heart with the German officer; does he hate Klaus, I guess his hatred and pity will wake up when he gradually takes the initiative; but he has never been sincere to Klaus, I don't believe it. As for Klaus, arrogant and critical, he tempted this Persian with 20% trust and 80% suspicion. A word from a tree trunk could easily break his trust, after which he could abandon him cruelly and torture him. He, he didn't consider him human at all, but maybe that's just because Klaus hated deceit, betrayal, and irregularity, because he didn't shoot him outright, didn't even tell anyone, you can see It was him for face, perhaps for the last trace of doubt, but in a concentration camp, you have 10,000 reasons for a Jew to die. But when he handed over the remaining eight cans of meat, he regarded this Persian, who was also an inferior person, as a friend without reservation. In the end, his panic and anger, disbelief and rush to get out of the way made him so embarrassed and distressed.
The director made a war movie into a suspense thriller with a small view of the earth. Reza's seemingly firm eyes and appearance hide uneasiness and pain. We can see that he is trying his best to save himself, and he is also in a moment. Dare not to relax, but he has the courage and wisdom to deal with this world. One by one, until the end, every night and day, every Persian class he took became the testimony of 2,850 concentration camp refugees, he was their testimony, the testimony of this war, he used wisdom Keeping the names of these men proves the evil of the Nazis and somehow punishes a perhaps less orthodox Nazi officer. And every name he remembers is also a testimony to every day and night of concentration camps he has been tensed with.
Reza confided his thoughts twice, one was to an old man who was drinking. I didn't see what the military uniform was, and the other was a German military doctor. I'm not sure why it was designed, but maybe it was to express some kind of guidance and understanding. Hope, maybe it's just a vague memory of the survivor Reza in real life.
At the beginning, the list of pages and pages turned to ashes in the raging fire is one of the most memorable shots for me. There is also Reza standing by the window watching the dawn, not wanting to meet Claus and saying that I am tired. Zha, and Reza, covered in blood, walked towards the end of the long railroad track that was about to see the dawn.
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