Still Wes Anderson, the picture is still beautiful, the music is still full of rhythm, the details still hide exaggerated humor, humorous irony, and a sense of desolation in irony. You can feel it all if you are a sensitive person.
Anderson's performance has always been stereotyped and labelled, and that's no reason to blame him. It is interesting and worthy of reflection when Westerners examine the perspective deviation of Easterners. When I was in college, a foreign teacher broadcasted Lost in Translation as a class content for everyone. At that time, I was surprised by how Japan is viewed from a Western perspective, so I wondered whether the behavior of our Orientals in the eyes of foreigners is so strange. But at least, these works are mirrors of their free expression, reflecting who they really are in us. What's more, people choose Japan, which is more developed or has cultural self-confidence. Imagine what kind of public opinion would be if the story was set in China.
He may want to tell you something other than a story, but you can also just smile, smile at Mayor Kobayashi, who is serious and righteous with a conspiracy and corruption, and smile at Stray Chief, who is stubborn and unyielding and bows his head after taking a shower. I laughed, and I heard some people laugh too, but it wasn't the kind of laughter that was intoxicated with comedy, even if it was a movie with comedy as its label. The mayor said that the exiled dogs can be passed almost unanimously in an instant, just like modifying our constitution. Soon after the mayor stepped down, the dogs all returned with glory, which reminded me of last year's half-way revealing the skyline project. Sorry, right is OK Do whatever you want. As for the dogs, to be or not to be controlled, loyal or not to be loyal, that is the question.
But whatever, I am a staunch dog party, and using a dog analogy will affect my judgment.
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