Happy Feet: A Lame Show of Personal Heroism

Marcelle 2022-04-19 09:01:32

1. A lame performance of personal heroism in
what should have been a great film, music, dance, and scraps full of joy and personal growth. But looking at the back, I feel sorry for the front. The life of a penguin has to be sublimated into the food chain and into the ecological environment. I know that environmental protection is very fashionable now, but it seems deliberate and boring to cut into the script with nondescript. When I think of the sketches of the Spring Festival Gala, no matter what happened before, the theme always sublimates at the end, and the characters always cry—and often the drama-style hoarseness.

What's more, I really don't understand why humans let Mambo out, and why they are calling for food to stop hunting and killing from the dance. I know, after all, it is a cartoon made for young children, maybe a happy ending is a kind of It must, but isn't it better to shoot logically? Unless the group of American animation experts are like Chinese experts, they treat their children as idiots all day long, and then make cheap movies with their own obscenities.

In fact, when Mambo was caught in the aquarium, I really felt that the film should end here when I saw it struggled between as if it had forgotten its past life and tried to break through the cage. Although it is very cold and has a very unhappy ending, but just stop it, I will feel that the mood is much more profound.

After that, it is undoubtedly a pan-American personal heroism plot to blame. Similar endings have been seen a lot, but few are so brainless.

2. Question: What exactly are the shunters and the dolls that appear when the Mambo slides down the avalanche for the first time? The sub-line that does not meet before and after does not meet

- what kind of role does human beings play in it? The bad guy who hooked Mambo down? Or a good person who will be moved by the penguin dance?

In fact, human beings as background group characters can show both sides and complexity. Although it may be difficult to understand, especially for the animation market, I still feel that the editing is too scattered, which not only does not help the main line, but also makes people feel uncomfortable. Chaos, and only a far-fetched attachment to the environmental theme at the end,

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Extended Reading

Happy Feet quotes

  • [to Memphis]

    Mumble: It's just like... singing, with your body.

  • [last lines]

    Lovelace: [narrating voice over] Is equal to the love you make. Oh baby, right on.