Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Photography major - Where's my parents' flag, Iggy?

Where's my parents' flag, Iggy?

Finally, I went to a deserted place to live in seclusion.

In the story of "Parents' Flag", Iggy saw through the sinister and intrigue of people's hearts, and finally he went to a deserted place, lived in seclusion, kept company with animals, and stayed away from the ugliness of the world.

The Flag of My Father's Generation is a war movie produced by American DreamWorks Film Distribution Company, directed by Clint Eastwood and supervised by Steven Allan Spielberg, and adapted from the best-selling book of the same name co-authored by James Bradley and Lamborghini. The film tells the famous photographic works representing the battle of Iwo Jima and the background of American soldiers raising the national flag on Iwo Jima.

Behind the scenes production

At the beginning of film preparation, when director Clint Eastwood announced that he would put the battle of Iwo Jima on the big screen, it really caused panic among Japanese authorities. By the end of the year, the film was about to start shooting, and Japan not only did not stop it, but even actively participated in the propaganda work of the film.

It turns out that Eastwood specially shot two versions to describe the influential battles in World War II. Joe rosenthal, who took photos, worked for the San Francisco Chronicle for 35 years after the war until he retired in 198 1. On August 20th, 2006, Rosenthal died in a nursing home in San Francisco at the age of 94. He was an honest and upright man until his death.