There is only one protagonist who died in the first part of the Battle of Changjin Lake, that is, the Lei Gong who made people cry with joy. Hu Jun's Leigong is one of the most popular characters in the battle movie of Changjin Lake, even better than Wu. Such a perfect performance stems from Hu Jun's deep understanding of the role.
From the beginning, the film of the battle of Changjin Lake was linked with the mission of the Seventh Company to enter North Korea. Even the instructor Mei Shengping felt the station, and Wu's younger brother secretly joined the army and was assigned to the Seventh Company.
The protagonists in Seven Miles are played by Wu, Jackson Yi, Mei Sheng played by Zhu, sniper Ping played by Elvis Han and Lei Gong played by Hu Jun, each with its own characteristics.
Lei Gong of Hu's military exercise is really deeply rooted in the hearts of the people. Lei Gong is the oldest soldier in the Seventh Company, and treats all the soldiers in the Seventh Company like their own children. Wu Wanli just joined the army, and WU GANG let tripterygium wilfordii protect him, and tripterygium wilfordii even recognized him as his adopted son! The young and old scenes of Wu Wanli and Lei Gong are the funniest part of the film.
Wu Wanli just joined the army and doesn't know the rules. Yu Cong bullied him too. Jade cong told Wu Wanli that tripterygium wilfordii had a bad ear, and Wu Wanli ran to tripterygium wilfordii's ear to scold him. As a result, tripterygium wilfordii could hear, but pretended not to hear. When Wu Wan Li scolded him, Lei Gong began to teach Wu Wanli a lesson.
This scene made all the audience laugh! Such cheerful scenes appear in war movies, in fact, to reflect the optimistic spirit of our soldiers.
Lei Gong brought joy to the audience and made them cry red at the end of the film.
Finally, in order to distract the US air bombing, Lei Gong drove a jeep with a marker bomb to distract the US bomb, but Lei Gong himself was unfortunately hit by the US military. Before he died, Lei Gong shouted "I am in pain, don't leave me here alone". It is this sentence that truly shows that war heroes are also flesh and blood, they are not steel.
This sentence was changed by Hu Jun himself. Originally, the director arranged a long line, probably from tripterygium wilfordii, but Hu Jun thought it should reflect the dying state more truly. I didn't expect Hu Jun's lines to be so tear-jerking.