I watched a movie on the weekend called "Peter Rabbit". This is an animated movie. The protagonist is the cute and soft Peter Rabbit. The plot is about the place where a litter of rabbits originally lived. A grumpy old man was banned, causing Peter Rabbit, the family under the big tree next to him, to lose his rations. Peter Rabbit's father planned to enter the garden to find food, but the old man made a pie and served it on the table. Grandpa was at odds with each other. During the mischief, the grandfather died of a heart attack. Peter Rabbit occupied the garden and began to live a carefree life again. Later, the London elite man who inherited the inheritance, the grandson of the grandfather inherited this The valuable inheritance, I plan to pack up and sell this house, so I start a big and small battle with Peter Rabbit. During this period, the elite man also fell in love with the lady next door who likes to paint. Later, because the elite man bought it Dynamite wanted to take Peter Rabbit in one pot, which led to an escalation of the conflict, because he wanted the girl to know that the elite man was just pretending to love rabbits in front of him, just for a show, Peter Rabbit pressed the explosive detonator, which blew up the rabbit nest Not to mention, it also damaged the heroine's studio, causing the heroine to break with the elite man.
Peter Rabbit felt that he had done something wrong. He entered the male protagonist's room to see the portraits of Peter Rabbit's parents that he took the opportunity to hang in the room during the death of his grandfather. There is a passage in the subtitles that impressed me particularly, that is, Father Rabbit said: "You don't It's not that you want to protect Abi, you're just afraid of losing, but sharing love doesn't mean losing love, love is infinite." This sentence made Peter Rabbit go to London to find the elite man, reached a reconciliation with him and came back to stay. The hostess, refurbish the house and move it in, and no longer sell it.
This is the development of the whole story. After watching this film, my biggest feeling is that in the face of the gift of nature, people and animals have reached a reconciliation. The film does not introduce who the owner of this manor was before Peter Rabbit lived, but from the question of the elite man saying that he didn't know who made these rabbits put on clothes, I think the owner of this manor before the grandfather entered should be They get along very harmoniously with Peter Rabbit, maybe even more loving, but this series of things happened later. Now it's reconciled again.
This is a matter of competition for territory. For the earth, this manor does not belong to humans or Peter Rabbit, but she belongs to the Earth. Humans or Peter Rabbit live in it, and they all enjoy the use of it. No one should monopolize rights, but human beings are developing too fast, they like to draw the ground as a boundary, and at the same time, it also compresses the living world of animals.
I think this film should be trying to tell us that love is sharing rather than possessing, just like Dad Rabbit said, sharing love does not mean losing love, love is infinite. The elite man and Peter Rabbit reconciled as before, and since then the creatures have returned to the manor and coexisted peacefully with humans. What a harmonious picture this is, isn't that how we humans lived in the earliest days? Why seek common ground while reserving differences? Dispatching all non-me races, it would be a sad thing when there are only human beings left on the earth. The richness of life is the essence of life.
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