Old man, you are so perfect, why no one loves you...

Landen 2022-01-02 08:01:43

Although the movie watching process was fairly smooth, it wasn't so happy. I haven't seen jungle adventures before. The old man took us to make a compass, trap squirrels, and fight with bears. I never lost interest in seeing it, but I was always a little depressed.

This old man was perfect beyond my expectation. At the beginning, the old man showed profound knowledge and wisdom. He was a millionaire and a scholar familiar with Indian culture, but he didn't care about it at all. In the middle of the old man showed calmness and fell into the forest, but always He calmly used knowledge to guide his behavior; at the end, the old man showed forgiveness, calmly led Robert into the trap, but saved him.

His perfection makes things weird. He is not happy. The only real laugh in the whole show is when he receives a birthday gift. At other times he looks at his young wife with doubts all day long; he does not own him. Feeling proud or satisfied, without a trace of emotion, self-evaluation: "I am not boring, I just lack imagination", a look of suffering; he has a great soul, but he cannot be the same as the same soul. Companions, friends, and people around him hate him and take advantage of him.

The suffering he accepted made him feel like a sinner. Maybe he really committed a crime: in a group of weak and despicable souls, appearing noble and great is the greatest sin.

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Extended Reading

The Edge quotes

  • Charles Morse: Did you know that you can make fire from ice?

  • Charles Morse: Today, I'm-a-gonna-kill the mutha fucka.

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