I just feel sorry for you

Allan 2022-10-14 10:05:10

I wonder why "Infinite Train" surpassed "Spirited Away" at the box office. Of course I don't understand if I don't watch the TV version if I get ridiculed.

After watching a few episodes of the TV version, I thought it was normal, and I was reprimanded to talk after watching the 19th episode.

Now that I have watched the nineteen episodes, I still feel that it is the same, and I have been despised and grown old.

Maybe I am really old, and this kind of youthful blood can no longer impress me.

But I don't understand, since when did watching an animation become such a serious thing?

Can't see a certain number of episodes, no. I didn't feel moved after watching episode 19, no. After reading it, you can't praise it well, and you can't become a fan.

Cartoons are a pastime in themselves. Why are they so serious and heavy?

When we were young, did we watch cartoons because they were profound and connotative? Not because it's good-looking and interesting?

For a cartoon, why should the audience be required to endure the first eighteen episodes? The audience doesn't owe it. That in itself is a production failure.

In my day, giants, Eva, and steel can be considered masterpieces. Later, a group of so-called young people appeared out of nowhere, and they caught cartoons of such a level as Ghost Slayer, which led to the flood of "magical works" overnight. Those who dared to criticize them were all put to death in a social way. Cartoons are supposed to be a source of happiness, but now they have become a source of pressure, because the "young people" are so numerous that they control the hegemony of public opinion.

I'm not angry or sad, I just feel sorry for the so-called young people who think this is a "sacred work".

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