(cough...it's just a short review with too many words, so I can only write it here, the title is random) Roman Polanski really told the story plainly and naturally. Originally, when the film was about to end, he was afraid of the protagonist. The dramatic development of being shot and killed by friendly forces after the German soldiers left, spent the past five years hard, and finally looked forward to the moment when the dawn was about to break, but was going to die under the gun of my own people. I was really worried at that time. It was a false alarm afterward. There is no deliberate sensationalism or exaggeration of the atmosphere. Except for the musical instruments in the film, there is almost no soundtrack. Even so, the whole film is quite infectious. The fate of life is saddened. It's hard to imagine how touching a movie would be if it was accompanied by a soundtrack, or with more subtle filming techniques. Favorite shot: When Szpilman was separated from his family and staggered down a street in ruins alone, crying, I almost cried with him. Then, after Szpilman found the piano in the hiding place, because it could not make a sound, he had to play it in the air. Even so, he had to enjoy the time of playing the piano to the fullest. Then the camera was pulled to the snowy streets of Warsaw outside the window accompanied by the illusory sound of the piano. , and then stopped abruptly. At that time, I really wanted this shot to last a little longer, and the camera could continue to be slowly pulled over the entire city of Warsaw, overlooking the war-torn Warsaw. Snow drifted down from the sky, but Szpilman ignored it. During these hard years, I was immersed in my illusory piano sound. The second is the scene where Szpilman was foraging for food in the abandoned building at night. After being discovered by a German sergeant, he was asked to play the piano. It was the first time Szpilman played the piano again after a lapse of four years. Even as a spectator, I was not only impressed many.
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