The final battle is more touching than the other three, portraying Ye Wen from an unattainable god to a flesh-and-blood man. People will always be born, old, sick and die, relatives and friends leave, people have the fear of death and the loneliness of being in a different place. And such a living Ye Wen may be the real Ye Wen, and this kind of Ye Wen can better reflect his noble quality and personality.
The cast is also quite powerful. In his later years, Ip Man was played by Huang Qiusheng, and the elegant atmosphere was captivating. I think if Ye Wen is still alive, it is probably like this. Some people say that Ye Wen's fighting scenes are disappointing. I want to say that Ye Wen is not the Zhang Sanfeng of martial arts novels. He can still create Tai Chi when he is over a hundred years old. Ye Wen lives by our side. He is more real than Huo Yuanjia and Chen Zhen than Huang Feihong and Da Dao Wang Wu. Because history is real. He is also a human being. It would be unrealistic for you to let him and those who are in their prime to be able to defeat them effortlessly.
Several supporting roles are also very human. Wang Dong, who has learned Wing Chun, always wants to show off and fight in front of others. In the face of the future of the workplace and the choice of human nature, Deng Sheng has been hovering between the two, but in the end he chose the right path. Chen Xiaochun embodies this inner contradiction vividly.
The movie allowed us to understand Ip Man and Hong Kong in the 1950s. The appearance of Bruce Lee at the end of the story finally satisfied my previous doubts and regrets. And at the end, Ip Man's real-life video (I think that should be true) elevates the plot.
I like this movie, I recommend everyone to watch it, I hope you like it too
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