Both "National Treasure" and "Night at the Museum" are a bit like historical science movies, requiring an understanding of the American cultural background. The screenwriter has compiled major figures and events in the United States into the film, Washington, Jefferson, Franklin, the Revolutionary War, the assassination of Lincoln. I also remembered the films of the assassination of Kennedy, the moon landing plan, and the alien incident mentioned in "Brave to the Dead Island", including the moon landing plan also mentioned in "Transformers". It seems that Americans like to study the secrets of their own country.
We also bought a small gift of the Declaration of Independence for $2 when we were in Philly. I opened it after watching the movie, but there is no specific content of the "Declaration of Independence", a miniature signed version. Looking at the contents of the Declaration of Independence, "We hold these truths to be self-evident: that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their creator with certain inalienable rights, among these are life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness ." How good it feels to be born human.
There is a plot in "National Treasure 2". Cage and the others went to France to search for clues to the treasure, and talked to the police about Montesquieu on the street. Suddenly I think of it, no wonder the French have such a sense of superiority, they think French is so beautiful, and they look down on Uncle Sam, because they have Rousseau and Montesquieu, and they have no choice but to worship them. Whether it is the Declaration of Independence or the Declaration of Human Rights, they are the basic guarantees of human beings. The spirit of civilization is the reason for social progress.
Foreigner museums are really good. The most impressive is the Museum of Science and Industry in Chicago, which is almost the Museum of Science and Industry Literacy. There are many interactive scientific experiments, documentaries, and various models. It turns out that museums can be so fun. Before this, I have not been to many museums, Shaanxi History Museum and Nanjing Museum. The museums in the impression are all dusty places without sunlight, and the employees are all at the age of retirement and waiting for retirement. The feeling is the same, and the tour is over within a few steps. Whether it is the ancient capital of the Ten Dynasties or the ancient capital of the Six Dynasties, the museum is so small, it is a bit unreasonable, is it because the cultural relics have been plundered?
It is also a pity that I did not go to the Smith Museum in Washington and the Metropolitan Museum in New York. It is estimated that there are many Chinese people who go to the Louvre, but they rarely meet their compatriots in the Museum of Science and Industry and the Boston Museum of Fine Arts. In the travel agency's line, almost all of them rarely arrange a trip to the museum.
To be honest, there are always similarities in movies. In "National Treasure 2", after the president came out of the secret room, what he saw was an Optimus Prime truck. The London street racing scene of Cage and Harris also has a bit of the shadow of the San Francisco car chase in "Brave Island". In the scene of grabbing the car, the owner of the car is like the owner of the Hummer in "Brave to the Dead Island". There is also the plot of the oil barrel falling. In "Brave to the Dead Island", the water barrel was dropped.
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