I wanted to give this animation five stars when I saw it halfway through. The last movie that made me want to do this was "Zootopia".
In terms of overall height, the Elf Hotel is definitely not as good as zootopia.
But there's something very detailed, stylized, and beyond technical about this film that strikes me.
For example, the posture of a person's movement;
The captain appeared in a white navy uniform with laser beams, and I could understand why Dracula instantly fell for her.
Look at her gestures, every second is confident.
I remember a pose where the captain did a dance-like gesture with his hands behind his back.
At that moment, the changes in the stretching of her arms and the bones of her entire upper body, as well as the changes in the relaxation of her movements, were all shown.
You can see at a glance that this is not a simple back stretch, it is a movement simulated after careful observation of professional dancers, and it includes speed changes and control of body muscles.
It is these details that make a dancer dance better than ordinary people, and it is this detail that makes even a simple movement seem so attractive.
For example, the indescribable elegance of a vampire when he was levitating, and the particularly high-spirited feeling of Dracula's daughter when she levitated and stretched her hips and stretched her back to teach her father a lesson.
There is also Dracula, who was dejected on the noisy dance floor after being rejected, a simple squat posture, looking very dejected.
Not to mention the dancing when Dracula is in high spirits, and the dead fish face of the fish waiter who is always sad.
The whole film is made up of countless such details, and the production team is very good at observing and capturing the actions and expressions of the characters.
If this is writing a novel, the author must have mastered the knack of writing the most stylish words, with a unique style that is unforgettable.
As for true love and kinship, although it is an old proposition, the proposition of second true love still strikes my heart.
Just happened to have just finished reading Paulo Coelho's "The Spiritual Journey of Brida Girl", and the book also threw a thorny question--
It's not difficult to meet true love. The difficulty is that you may meet more than one true love. How do you choose then?
hmmmm, fortunately, Dracula did not encounter the problem of choosing one or the other.
But the essence of the problem is the same: once we are with someone, we want it to be forever.
Separation is a loss, active separation is more like a betrayal.
Is it really so?
This is the concept of the general public, a long-standing cognition, and the film also says that zing does not lie.
zing is zing, even if you meet this person, she still has a bunch of unsolved problems and even wants to kill you, but zing is the recognition of the soul, zing sees everything.
The family line with her daughter also gave another answer:
If your love is truly unconditional, then you will never lose anyone, whether you are actually together or apart.
Unconditional love, this is the ultimate pursuit of all literary works.
Going back to the animation, my favorites are the ones that seem to have absolutely nothing to do with advancing the plot.
Such as the first appearance of the captain,
Dracula was distracted and could only draw a Dali curve from his mouth.
Dracula put on the holiday clothes and danced in high spirits,
A series of psychological changes in the werewolf couple's custody of their children,
Every moment the fish waiter speaks,
These are not stories made up by the mind, they are expressions of the soul.
Finally, it's hard to admit that I'm lonely when everyone thinks you're Dracula.
View more about Hotel Transylvania 3: Summer Vacation reviews