The lone explorers of that era and their identity issues

Russ 2022-01-16 08:01:50

This kind of identity discussion is very interesting. Is it about belonging? The male protagonist Leonardo has always wanted to join the academic club (the elite organization known as the full of great men to change the world), and the Bigfoot has always wanted to find his own kind, but just like the female protagonist questioning Leonardo That way: if they don’t agree with you, why do you still want to join Leonardo and answer "because they said I can’t join". This sentence means that he is just blending in for the sake of being competitive, perhaps for fame, but in the final analysis Competitiveness, as the Snowman Queen said, "prove one's worth", and is far from a question of belonging, far from "being with my kind". In the process, Leonardo went further and further, finally He became a person who only cared about himself and ignored his companions. In the end, he could not prove any value. He only won verbal victory at most, but suffered a disastrous defeat in action. Of course, he finally woke up, trusted his companions, and focused on what he loved. Things (rather than proving himself) Bigfoot didn’t want to die alone and wanted to be with the same kind at first, but his need for belonging was crushed by the Snowman Queen, and then he had the same consciousness as Leonardo.

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Extended Reading
  • Margot 2022-03-25 09:01:19

    Some children left the scene before they saw half of it.

  • Sonny 2022-03-25 09:01:19

    Together with "The Yeti Adventure" and "Snowman", this is the third yeti to come to the Himalayas in an animated feature film within a year.

Missing Link quotes

  • Mr. Link: Did we have to take his clothes?

    Sir Lionel Frost: Of course. We can't have you wandering about naked.

    Mr. Link: I know but... even his underwear? I mean, I turned them inside out but it's still a little weird.

  • Sir Lionel Frost: You can speak. How can you speak?