Two soldiers are trying to survive in the jungle. But the sergeant already knows he's gonna die, and he knows why for war crimes. And no matter how it happens, he sees himself as being sentenced, which is not bad for a criminal who is aware of the consequences of his actions. "When I see a soldier," says the village headman, "something
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Two soldiers are trying to survive in the jungle. But the sergeant already knows he's gonna die, and he knows why for war crimes. And no matter how it happens, he sees himself as being sentenced, which is not bad for a criminal who is aware of the consequences of his actions. "When I see a soldier," says the village headman, "something always happens: people suffer." This phrase accumulates another part of the moral component of the film, since the Second Congo War is depicted here as something meaningless and cruel.
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