영화는 아니고 미니시리즈 체르노빌 4화에서 방사능에 오염된 지역주민 소개시키는 장면과 비슷한데요.
Old Woman Babushka: Do you know how old I am?
Soldier: I don't know. Old.
Old Woman Babushka: I'm 82. I've lived here my whole life. Right here, that house, this place. What do I care about safe?
Soldier: I have a job. Don't cause trouble.
Old Woman Babushka: Trouble? You're not the first soldier to stand here with a gun. When I was 12, the revolution came - czar's men, then bolsheviks, boys like you marching in lines - they told us to leave. No. Then there was Stalin and his famine, the Holodomor - my parents died, two of my sisters died - they told the rest of us to leave. No. Then the Great War - German boys, Russian boys, more soldiers, more famine, more bodies - my brothers never came home, but I stayed, and I'm still here.
Old Woman Babushka: Do you know how old I am?
Soldier: I don't know. Old.
Old Woman Babushka: I'm 82. I've lived here my whole life. Right here, that house, this place. What do I care about safe?
Soldier: I have a job. Don't cause trouble.
Old Woman Babushka: Trouble? You're not the first soldier to stand here with a gun. When I was 12, the revolution came - czar's men, then bolsheviks, boys like you marching in lines - they told us to leave. No. Then there was Stalin and his famine, the Holodomor - my parents died, two of my sisters died - they told the rest of us to leave. No. Then the Great War - German boys, Russian boys, more soldiers, more famine, more bodies - my brothers never came home, but I stayed, and I'm still here.