TIME Magazineさんのインスタグラム写真 - (TIME MagazineInstagram)「"Father Soldier Son"—a wrenching window, 10 years in the making, into the life of a military family—has a somewhat freeform shape; sometimes it makes tiny leaps—you just have to trust and follow along. But its easygoing structure may also be what makes it feel so intimate, our film critic Stephanie Zacharek writes. Directors @leslyedavis and Catrin Einhorn, both of The New York Times, don't have to spell out codes of masculinity, familial duty and love for one's country. Instead, we're allowed to bear witness as Brian Eisch and his family show us what those values mean to them. At the start, Davis and Einhorn couldn't have known where this story would take Eisch and his boys, Isaac and Joey. The movie they've made tells us something about the way military families function, but it also underscores the reality that all families are susceptible to shifts and ruptures, and to heartbreak. Donning a uniform in the name of your country doesn't give you special protection from heartache, and basic training may teach you some necessary skills, but not all. The rest you have to learn as you go along. We're all soldiers in one way or another. In this photograph: Sgt. First Class Eis​ch weeps as he struggles to s​ay goodbye to his children in 2010. Read the full review of the film, now streaming on @netflix, at the link in bio. Photograph by Marcus Yam (@yamphoto)—@nytimes/@reduxpictures」7月21日 1時31分 - time

TIME Magazineのインスタグラム(time) - 7月21日 01時31分


"Father Soldier Son"—a wrenching window, 10 years in the making, into the life of a military family—has a somewhat freeform shape; sometimes it makes tiny leaps—you just have to trust and follow along. But its easygoing structure may also be what makes it feel so intimate, our film critic Stephanie Zacharek writes. Directors @leslyedavis and Catrin Einhorn, both of The New York Times, don't have to spell out codes of masculinity, familial duty and love for one's country. Instead, we're allowed to bear witness as Brian Eisch and his family show us what those values mean to them. At the start, Davis and Einhorn couldn't have known where this story would take Eisch and his boys, Isaac and Joey. The movie they've made tells us something about the way military families function, but it also underscores the reality that all families are susceptible to shifts and ruptures, and to heartbreak. Donning a uniform in the name of your country doesn't give you special protection from heartache, and basic training may teach you some necessary skills, but not all. The rest you have to learn as you go along. We're all soldiers in one way or another. In this photograph: Sgt. First Class Eis​ch weeps as he struggles to s​ay goodbye to his children in 2010. Read the full review of the film, now streaming on @ネットフリックス, at the link in bio. Photograph by Marcus Yam (@yamphoto)—@ニューヨーク・タイムズ/@reduxpictures


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