Feature: |
In 1958, after World War II, devastated Germany, Mai Ke Berg, a 15-year-old living in Berlin, suddenly fell ill when he came home from school, when a strange woman named Han Na helped him. When Mai Ke recovered from jaundice, he found Han Na to thank her. Unexpectedly, the two were quickly involved in a passionate and secret relationship, though Han Na was much older than Mai Ke. Mai Ke found that Han Na loves to read his books, and his reading power makes them more intimate. A book to read, Han Na deeply fascinated. However, one day, Han Na suddenly quit without leaving Mai Ke secretly hurt. Although Mai Ke had forgotten Han Na in 1966, that relationship was always his sweetest reminder. Already a law school intern, he attended a trial of Nazi war criminals before his graduation. Just then, Mai Ke and Han Na met again, but what unexpected to him was that he could not think of anyhow he would meet with Han Na, who turned out to be Na Nara's female guard in Nazi concentration camp Facts Han Na confesses, and because of unwillingness to expose himself to the fact that he is not recognized in front of people, recognize this does not belong to their own felony. Mai Ke was now able to help Han Na to clarify the facts. Out of condemnation of Han Na's crimes and his unwillingness to expose his relationship with Han Na, he chose silence and eventually Han Na was sentenced to life imprisonment. Mai Ke began sending his own reading tape to Han Na in prison for many years, which allowed Han Na to find the meaning and courage to live again, and Han Na learned to read and write through the verbatim comparison between the tape and the book Start writing to Mike. Mai Ke never returned a letter to Han Na, maybe he wanted to escape that sense of blame, maybe he did not have the courage to face Han Na, which made Han Na extremely lonely. When Han Na was released from prison, Mai Ke came to jail and saw already white-haired Han Na, who refused to shake Han Na's hand even though he promised to provide Han Na with material aid. Feelings, Han Na despair and suicide.
|