I've seen in the movie theater 30 years ago, I was a teenager. I also understand little about the film, but captivated by the music, and I was influenced.
A great legend in Europe, because the Berlin Wall was officially dismantled in 1989
My initial experience with the movie was also decades ago. Fortunately, I went with some friends and saw it at the drive-in. The first time really should be there, where it can never be better. I can't remember that far back
that well, but I suppose I was high at the time or drunk. Probably drunk since I often went to the drive-ins back then drunk to especially watch horror movies.
You're very kind, because you come into the memento with me. I'm from Hungary, I have a flawed knowledge of languages English, but I hope you understand me, and furthermore, I hope that I don't bring about difficulty to you by this.
Hungary was a socialist state from 1949 until 1989. Government: Marxist-Leninist one-party socialist state.
I was 13 years old when I listened the prohibited radio, at night under the quilt is. I did not understand, but I just listened, because it was forbidden.

It was Radio: "Free Europe Radio"
(Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty (RFE/RL) is a state-run U.S. broadcasting organization that provides news, information, and analysis to countries in Eastern Europe, Central Asia and the Middle East "where the free flow of information is either banned by government authorities or not fully developed". RFE/RL is a 501(c)(3) corporation that receives U.S. government funding and is supervised by the Broadcasting Board of Governors, an agency overseeing all U.S. federal government international broadcasting services.
Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia )
I was looking for the story of film in Goole, now.
Pink Floyd – The Wall - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
".....Pink slowly begins to lose his mind to metaphorical "worms". He shaves all his body hair and, while watching The Dam Busters on television, morphs into a neo-Nazi alter-ego. Pink's manager, along with the hotel manager and some paramedics, discover Pink and inject him with drugs to enable him to perform.
Pink fantasises that he is a dictator and his concert is a neo-Nazi rally. His followers proceed to attack ethnic minorities, and Pink holds a rally in suburban London, singing "Waiting for the Worms". The scene is intercut with images of animated marching hammers that goose-step across ruins. Pink screams "Stop!" and takes refuge in the toilets at the concert venue, reciting poems.
In a climactic animated sequence, Pink, depicted as a small, almost inanimate rag doll, is on trial, and his sentence is "to be exposed before [his] peers." The judge gives the order to "tear down the wall". Following a prolonged silence, the wall is smashed.
Several children are seen cleaning up a pile of debris after an earlier riot, with a freeze-frame on one of the children emptying a Molotov cocktail."