This is a movie about friendship. In fact, it is not just friendship, but also responsibility and kindness. Spiders are discriminated against for their clumsy ugliness, the way they trap their prey, and even the less likable rat Templeton, to make it clear: Charlotte is a nuisance guy. But it was Charlotte's spider web that really saved Webb the pig. Charlotte has to help Webb regardless of her own safety, because they are friends. The little spider also has great righteousness. The quality of animals has nothing to do with appearance, let alone people? But we are used to getting to know people. Even though we always say: All men are created equal. There will still be injustices and inequalities. But obviously, this film tells us that discrimination is also worn away by reality, and with the deepening of interaction, Charlotte's precious qualities are discovered by other animals, such as integrity and responsibility. But what impressed me the most was not the protagonist, but the mouse Templeton, because it was real. This film unreservedly portrays Templeton's psychology of thinking about himself and having fun in time, so that the unpretentious expression of truth can make the audience feel sincere. And the rat's struggle between enjoying its own pleasure and helping others, as well as the small struggle of self-contradiction, also makes the viewer can't help laughing. The beauty of human nature.
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