"Border" tells the story of two soldiers from rival nations who are able to put aside their differences and, for the briefest of moments, see each other as individuals as they share an ice-cold bottle of Coke.
Well no. It still raises some questions. What is the relation between those countries? Was the piece of paper just his attitude or is there something deeper to it? Is any form of any unregistered logistics of any matter an offense or seen as aggression? Did he let the crossing of the piece of paper slide and throw it back while showing spite to remind him that nothing without permission is welcome? What hopeful loophole is the short sneak alteration of that borderline supposed to accomplish? A customs issue? Other strict goods entry regulations? A wide or even total embargo? Is that a satellite dish in the background? As someone who takes borders as seriously as those men take their border, I'm left with not much idea.
@@Mi_Fa_Volare bro the whole point of the ad is to show people to put asides their differences and nationalities and just drink a coca. what the fuck are you on my guy
@@uppervolta6680 That's a bold interpretation. Without well built up context, that message you are assuming is delivered poorly as the certainty of the point you mentioned is washed into blur because of things that are for granted with borders and what serious business borders and border post duty are. Even with peaceful and good relationship between countries, the import regulations of a country can be very strict, so that bringing in goods as simple as Coca Cola informally can get you in trouble. And the character across the border clearly comes across as someone who takes the his job seriously, so that the only dodgy thing he'd do is accepting that beverage with such workaround. By the logic of the point you interpreted, why would that border guard share that cola at all? Even for a Coca Cola ad that's too optimistic of a message without properly building up a proficient story. And again, where in this ad were serious differences established? Just like differnt cultures can see things differently, can you see how the message can be seen differently from person to person? The message I'm interpreting is "Coca Cola is worth a dodgy workaround." With *how little this ad offers,* interpretation can be diverse from person to person. The writer of that story is to blame for misreading whatever message is supposed to be behind it, as it offers so little for perception of good leads to the message. Don't be so sure you got the point of this ad correctly, boy.
Just like differnt cultures can see things differently, you can see how the message can be seen differently from person to person? The message I'm interpreting is "Coca Cola is worth a dodgy workaround." With how little this ad offers, interpretation can be diverse from person to person. The writer of that story is to blame for misreading whatever message is supposed to be behind it, as it offers so little for perception of good leads to the message. Don't be so sure you got the point of this ad correctly, boy. So no, you are wrong. Without the words being spoken and deficient hints or even misleading hints you may not get the right idea what this story is supposed to mean.
The fact that the soldiers are wearing parade uniforms from like the early 19th century next to a modern-era border crossing just makes this even more funny.
I think they’re Germans And Austrians. Based on the uniform of the fatter one, it looks like an Austrian one during Prussian-Austrian war. And by that, I’d assume the other is a German (or might be Russian).
The most powerful part is when it shows the blue and portly soldier just staring at a cold coca cola in the desert. I've never seen a more thirsty man in my life. I would do everything I could to share a coke with him, even fudge the borders of my country... just a for a second.