Seeing the big from the small, entertaining

Claudine 2022-04-19 09:02:37

Yesterday, I took my daughter to the cinema for the first time, and I did some homework before going to the movie. Overall, it is worth watching.

At the beginning of the movie, it was said that the snow monster was pulled out by a yak, and I couldn't help laughing. Snow monsters abide by the precepts on the stone in their inherited world, and no one has ever doubted it. Each snow monster has a fine division of labor, and it is meaningful to deceive yourself in a lie. The village chief did not allow them to have questions, and if they had any, they had to hide them in their hearts.

Unfortunately, the protagonist Migo encounters Littlefoot (i.e. human) by chance, and he is both afraid and full of doubts, because the commandment on the stone tells them that Littlefoot is cruel and non-existent. Migo called almost all the snow monsters in the village to see the remaining plane wreckage, but unfortunately the plane wreckage slid down. Miguo shouted to the villagers and invited the village chief. The village chief asked Miguo to say that it was not a Littlefoot but a yak. ​​Miguo insisted on the bottom line of education he received since he was a child and insisted that it was a Littlefoot, so he was expelled.

Migo is taken to a mysterious cave, and it turns out that there are several snow monsters who believe that Littlefoot is real, and there are other worlds under the clouds. Migo goes down the mountain to find Percy the littlefoot, and proves to the snow monsters in the village that he is not lying.

The village chief found Migo and took him to understand the truth between the Yeti and the Littlefoot. Mi Guo was shocked, hesitated, and came out with the village chief to deceive the villagers into saying that Littlefoot was a yak. . . . . .

The final outcome is of course everyone's happy, but this ending is too good.

The whole story is suitable for all ages. From the perspective of an adult, I will share my humble opinion: the cloud layer where snow monsters live is a closed world. /Don't talk about state affairs. Let the snow monsters stay safe, don't think, and keep working in their posts without asking for meaning, just like Migo's father always thought that the sun would come out when the bell rang, because this was what Grandpa Migo told him. Such a form is conducive to management and effective, and it is good for the village chief to enjoy it and pass it on from generation to generation.

The part where the village chief told the snow monsters that the littlefoot was a yak was really cold. There are many things in real life that are similar to this. Driven by interests and choosing values, most people will always become victims.

In the lines, everyone has the right to know the truth, and only those who know it can choose. Finally, the village chief finally let go of the tradition and let the snow monsters choose for themselves. This scene may only appear in the movie. In short, the mutual trust between humans and snow monsters deserves everyone's cheers, even if it is only in the cinema for a short time.

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Extended Reading

Smallfoot quotes

  • Fleem: It's not wisdom, and it's definitely not invisible.

  • Meechee: It's not just about tearing down old ideas. It's about finding new ones.

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