论文部分内容阅读
2010年,有部电影在前南斯拉夫掀起热潮,票房接近《阿凡达》的两倍。而点燃我对乌拉圭热情的,正是这部电影。电影的开始,一个小男孩在路灯下独自颠球。他自言自语的这番话,一下子抓住了我:“我妈妈说,一个人怎么生并不重要。重要的是怎么活,怎么做梦。”这小男孩只有一条健康的腿,但非常乐观。当他喜欢踢足球的时候,他突然意识到,人有时需要两条腿。小男孩的邻居迪克,虽然没进过正式的球场,只在他家旁边的街上踢球,但球玩得出神入化。他妈妈想让他去工厂做工,小男孩对他说:“那样,你的生活就毁了。你不属于工厂。”
In 2010, some films set off a fever in the former Yugoslavia, with box office close to twice that of “Avatar.” It is this movie that ignites my passion for Uruguay. The beginning of the movie, a young boy alone in the street lights. He said to me: “My mother said that it is not important how a person lives, what matters is how to live and how to dream.” “The boy has only one healthy leg , But very optimistic. When he likes playing football, he suddenly realized that sometimes people need two legs. Little boy’s neighbor Dick, although not in the formal stadium, only playing in the street next to his home, but the ball play a superb. His mother wanted him to go to work in the factory, and the little boy said to him: ”Your life will be ruined, you do not belong to the factory.“ ”