It's one of the rare and profound animated film series I've ever seen. It's hard to imagine that this is a 1995 movie, and it doesn't seem to be outdated now.
"Her Memories" is interspersed with beauty and horror, making people overwhelmed. I don't know what is true and what is false. The last person fell into beauty, and one person almost fell into memory. The whole machine seems to have become a devouring monster. , devouring and seducing passers-by in the universe;
"The Stinkiest Weapon" has turned again, full of black humor, and also satirizes those who stubbornly perform tasks mechanically. They seem to be unable to recognize themselves, but only know how to move forward;
"The Street of Cannons" is also very intriguing, "cannons that are poisonous to people themselves", people who work like machines, everyone has an unhealthy body, it doesn't matter where the cannonballs are fired, it doesn't matter what war is...
In my opinion, the connection between the three is probably a different extension of the relationship between humans and technology. There are cosmic monsters similar to "artificial intelligence", and humans who accidentally become the most terrifying weapons without knowing it. , and there are puppets who only know war
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