The Adventures of Tintin hits theaters and I desperately need to see it in two days.
Find no one in a circle, simply act on your own. Go to a store, buy a salted chicken, buy a milk tea, the cinema at 4 o'clock in the afternoon on weekdays turns out to be so comfortable and spacious.
Spielberg's kind of commercialization is different from Nolan and Clint Eastwood. It seems to be more mainstream. But after all, it is a master level, never worry about failure, just worry about whether it will be too easy. But after all, it is a non-Disney and non-Pixar animation work, or between a light-hearted fairy tale adventure story and a slightly mature commercial action blockbuster.
Originally, I watched it carefully with the mood of not overly expecting it, and the result was that the charging effect was excellent. In the front row was a dad with a little boy who had just left school, and he and I laughed the loudest in the audience. It's so strange, sometimes such a fast-paced film with many screen cuts may make middle-aged and tired uncles unable to keep up with the plot, but children can keep up with the subtitles, plot and humorous points without any effort.
Tintin's sub-journalist chivalry, and Captain Bearded's passion for drinking and out of control at any time is really exciting and joyful. Snow White (ignoring the fact that it's actually called Milou) is such a shining sidekick in it, brave, clever and mischievous.
The whole retro and smooth adventure story is fantastic from start to finish. And the various jokes interspersed in it, such as the reckless police brothers, the coloratura singers who proudly said "what a bunch of cute hillbillies", are full of "mainland" flavor - this is disgusting to hear American language What a comfortable thing for me. Of course, Spielberg also hired a bunch of British actors like Simon Pegg to dub it, ha.
All the way back, I went to the bathhouse humming a little song. After thinking about it, I felt that we are often kind and cowardly, or brave and rude. It is actually quite difficult to be both kind and brave.
So we will always love stories like this.
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