So,
apparently when you jump into a movie 40 minutes, or in my case being sick for
the first day of class that the movie was being shown, makes it very difficult
to understand what is happening in a movie. Although after asking others, it
seems like I wasn’t the only one that was in the dark about what was happening
even though everyone else was actually there to see the first part of the
movie.
Although
missing the first portion of the movie was not intended, I believe that the
confusion that it brought about helped signify the confusion that went on in
the plot of the movie, or at least the parts that I understood. Examples of
this confusion that I witnessed is how it didn’t seem like people fully
understood how to handle the baby since it was such a strange site to them
having not seen one in nearly two decades. Another example of this confusion is
how no one ever mentioned why there was a war going on or what their
motives/intentions were; they just seemed to be fighting.
One
of the few things that I was actually able to understand out of this confusion
was the symbol of hope that the baby was, how perfect that this was the only
thing that I understood. When the baby passed through the crowds of people,
everyone stopped fighting and some even started praying. This shows that hope
really can stop even the worst of things. Sadly, the fighting resumed just a
few short seconds after the baby passed through the crowds, signifying that
hope can only do so much for so long and that there needs to be more for hope
for anything to ever change.
I'd have to agree with you that the beginning is sort of crucial to understand what is going on. I missed the second day but I was still able to pick up with what was going on
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