Monday, September 14, 2009

10 To 12 Month Old Baby Solid Food Chart

The Boy in the Striped Pajamas

The impression one gets looking The Boy in the Striped Pajamas is a film that does not intend to cross the viewer with a strong warning against 's holocaust, or at least not this is the fundamental element of the film.
Rather, there is shown in the story through the eyes of a child of 8 years and through factors such as its simplicity, its imagination and curiosity, which soon becomes a craving to explore something completely unknown and incomprehensible to him.

Bruno, the protagonist, a German boy, the son of the commander of a concentration camp, was initially thrown into a situation that can only be explained by both paradox of justification to provoke a smile in the viewer (bitter): the field Concentration is a farm ... The deportees are strange farmers perpetually wearing pajamas ... And those numbers on their pajamas must inevitably be part of a game ...
E 'in this emotional context that they met Shmu , a jew boy his own age, who lives inside the camp. Their friendship takes shape in an almost surreal, and perhaps because of it more credible (and certainly most touching), if one considers the almost fairy-tale vision that Bruno has the world around him.
The meeting does not prove decisive to the understanding of reality (which in fact never occurs at all) by the protagonist. However, it reveals an element that can turn him in doubt about what the real nature of his father and the lessons that are taught.
's just at this point that makes his real pop element that violence, if you take in small doses even the appearance of a verbal and physical violence, is certainly its most successful expression in looks and tone of a terrifying Nazi lieutenant. Bruno
This triggers a further element in emotional fear.
And it was through fear or because of this that the child feels compelled to seek the friendship of Shmu and the way to "redeem himself" in his eyes.

The film moves initially at a very slow pace and the sin of wanting to somehow take back some ideas already present (and presumably more developed) in Life is beautiful.
remains, however, a film that deserves to be seen. And be seen for what is: the exploration of a horrible and cruel world by a boy armed only with his imagination and his naivete.

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