mojito_sangria

mojito_sangria t1_j2f45r2 wrote

One of my favorite books in classical literature. It was an epic covering the tumultuous history of France through the scale of common people like Jean Valjean. On a social bases, it showed how an unjust society could transform a man to a criminal, a women to a prostitute and children to devastation. On a personal bases, it showed the path of redemption of Jean Valjean.

I hope that I could read the original verses in French one day.

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mojito_sangria t1_j2f3e0w wrote

The musical is somewhat misleading, as it may depict Javert as being assigned with the only mission of pursuing Jean Valjean in his life.

And it missed out some interactions between ABC friends, espcially between Marius the Bonapartist and others republicans

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mojito_sangria OP t1_j2cqpke wrote

Both movies begin with the protagonists having certain traumas in history, and gradually encountering supernatural events and person/people that subtly affect their lives, particularly in events like a séance.

Then there's the plot twist in the end that the protagonists are the real ones who are already dead but still wandering around in the world of livings.

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mojito_sangria t1_ixxqzbu wrote

This is Shanghai, the city of my parents. They've lived through the cultural revolution and the Tiananmen demonstration and massacre before moving to the States. I visited Shanghai where my grandparents and relatives live once in a while before college.

I appreciate the fearlessness of the protestors in the picture, because they're combating probably the most brutal dictatorship on this planet.

Some of my classmates and colleagues who are from China defended CCP's barbarian crackdown in HK, Xinjang, and seemed to accept whatever BS the CCP propagandists are indoctrinating them, despite studying and working in the US. For one moment I thought the Chinese people from China are incorrigible, but I'm certainly wrong.

Free China, and Fuck CCP, Fuck Xinnie the Pooh

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