The 1942 movie "Casablanca" depicts the enclave of World War II, refugees escaped Nazi Europe and pursued a dream to America while using an uninhabited city as a safe haven. The protagonist is Rick Blain played by Humphrey Bogart who owned a nightclub and casino in Morocco uninhabited during the Nazi era. Brian's sole purpose seems to be money and helps you get the necessary immigration documents for those who are going to pay for freedom, so they show arrogance and self-righteousness .
For romantic people, Casablanca is a wonderful place in the film starring Ingrid Bergman and Humphrey Bogar in 1942. Actually Casablanca movies are actually filmed in Hollywood's sound field and authentic Casablanca is often overlooked by visitors to the outdoor market in Marrakesh and Fes, the exotic beaches of Essaouira and Tanger. Casablanca is a traveler who wants to experience the present and understand the past with feeling like a locals, not tourists. As Morocco's most populous city, Casablanca, is vast, visitors must try to find hidden details. As you arrive at the water you can see that the mix of sand and style of Casablanca is like Los Angeles. That is why it is worth visiting.
In the 1942 movie "Casablanca", Claude Rains' officer, Captain Reynolds, told this in a conversation with Rick Blain played by Humphrey Bogart. The last two lines of the first poem represent his power in Casablanca. After delivering the line, he was called by the assistant of Gestapo 's official major strategist. In 1960's movie 'Sunrise In Campobello', Lui Howe played by Hume Kronin read the poem by Franklin Roosevelt played by Ralph Bellamy. Reading is easy at first at first, some is a joke, but as it continues, neither seems to recognize the importance of this poem to Roosevelt's struggle against his criticisms.
For many Westerners, this town is a romantic rhyme represented by Michael Krits' "Casablanca" movie in 1942, a cynical overseas expatriate Hanover in America. Humphrey Bogart (famous quotation in his film is still brilliant and transcendent irony: "Look at me, children!" And "Sam played again" and a selfless Caucasian male (Rick Blaine) at the beginning of World War II at his expense for his beloved Ingrid Bergman (Ilsha) he receives frequent pressures from local governments, but writes illegal letters These letters will help them escape to the United States, but one day Rick's former lover Ingrid Bergman and her husband will appear in his cafe Rick faced a tough challenge that would result in unexpected complications, hurting my heart and eventually making an unbearable decision.