
'The Harp of Burma' is a short, two-part adaptation of a famous Japanese novel of the same name. It revolves around a Japanese battalion during World War II. The men are unique in that they are also a choir group. Their leader has taught the entire battalion how to sing, and one of the men plays a harp during each song. The men sing in order to boost their morale during such dark times as war. When every single day is a day fearful of death, it's very calming to just sing.
The thing about death is it's something no one wants. Death can be accepted and given into by people who are dying, but it's never something people truly want from the beginning. I think this is so because life is such a wonderful thing. To live, breathe, socialize with others, fall in love... these are things most precious to life and our humanity. No one wants to lose any of this. The concept of death, however, is dealt differently between some countries, like Americans and Japanese for example.