Thin Red Line - Mya Sulzer

The movie, Thin Red Line, was almost conveyed like a poem. Throughout the film, the dialogue spoke in riddles. We also saw imagery of peaceful animals and the passion of love in the midst of war. This imagery gave the viewer relief from the gore. Holy transcendence makes it into the film through the shots of tall trees and prolonged pauses on the ground where the sun has broken through. The film showed divine aspects when it showed Witt's mother dying. An angel of death held her close and comforted her. This image gave Witt the notion to be scared of death and what comes after it. He says, " I couldn't find nothing uplifting... about going back to God. I hear people talk about immortality. But I ain't seen it." He thinks there is no hope in seeing a loved one die. He hopes that he will go just as she did, at peace. I believe in the end, with gained immortality. No one from that mission will forget his bravery. Everyone he has touched will remember him.  

In my religion, Buddhism, we are taught that suffering is derived from a desire of some sort. This means that if we are to see the light, we must first know the darkness. In other words, they are one in the dame, and one can not live without the other. This film shows us that immortality could not exist without mortality. 

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