After watching this movie, I was greatly shocked, and a feeling of admiration could not help but arise.
The sons and daughters of these heroes in the plain, relying on a belief-national spirit, shed their heads and blood for the liberation of their hometown. They fought bravely against the enemy and dazzled him with their wisdom. During the arrest, Su and others intercepted the grain truck, damaged the electric wire and pulled out the turret, making the enemy mistakenly think that they were still outside the city. Ma Ying cooperated closely with Zheng Jingzhi, an underground worker, to rescue Ma Auntie in the able-bodied training center and the traitor Wu Fatty from the enemy. Ma Ying and others also escaped from the jaws of death. What I admire more is the will of anti-Japanese soldiers. After Sue was arrested, the enemy threatened, lured and tortured him, but they failed to destroy Sue's will. In the face of whips and chilling instruments of torture, Sue remained calm and said nothing about the Eighth Route Army. ...
On the contrary, those traitors and Japanese aggressors are even more hateful, and their words and deeds are in sharp contrast with those of anti-Japanese soldiers. Sue and Sue were arrested at the same time. Facing the temptation of beauty, Sue searched hard and eventually became a traitor. ...
Anti-Japanese soldiers wrote a magnificent song of national liberation with blood and life. At the same time, the film also tells us: remember this bloody history.