I like this very much, especially when I just finished watching the brief history of human beings recently, I feel like the progress of human beings' transformation from primitive society to agricultural civilization step by step. In human civilization, the two merged (of course, the book says that Homo sapiens may have eliminated each other, which is not the point) In the follow-up, in fact, various stories express human nature naturally. When you live in this world, you will definitely have a lot of resonance in life. The mother wants stability and is quick to accept changes. The father values family and is not used to changes. The younger brother is addicted to entertainment and new things, and the heroine is the most rational person in it. What makes him happiest is that he has new female friends. Seeing them take an adventure together makes me feel like a well-protected child in an ivory tower. Finally, seeing the outside world is free! And the idea that the male protagonist wants to stay, everything happens naturally. Follow-up bananas are eaten, monkeys are encountered, and women are saved to save men, especially spiders (obviously huskies). It shows the wisdom of a new civilization when humans don’t need to use their bodies. Survival does not need to be hungry and full. When you can rest, your brain seems to naturally start to develop and then you can think about problems and solve problems. So the little girl of the new civilization found the problem and solved the problem.
In fact, I feel that the main line of this story is not scattered at all, and some themes have been added to the sub-line, so there is no need to deliberately dismember and analyze that people have not explained it clearly and clearly. It is enough for a movie to have multiple elements to resonate and immerse the audience! (Is it really nitpicking for that long review first?)
Not as good as the first one! I love crazy primitives
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