Narration is abstract, allowing readers to quickly produce concepts; description is concrete, allowing readers to produce corresponding images in their minds, and then readers will draw their own concepts or conclusions from these images. After watching this documentary, I finally know why some documentaries are so boring and boring—generally documentaries are only telling, but "Africa" is describing. Use pictures, sound effects, and words to tell lively and fleshy stories on the African continent.
First of all, this documentary won on the screen. Every frame is cut off as a computer wallpaper. The lens conversion and the light and shadow tones are perfectly combined. The shocking natural landscape at the beginning is enough to attract people to continue watching. It is hard to imagine such a wonderful scene on the earth. Seeing this vast land of Africa, I suddenly felt that the mountains and rivers of the West Lake were full of family style, just like a girl in a boudoir who had never traveled far. Africa is an old man who has experienced the vicissitudes of life and is simple and natural. Wild animals are rushing and jumping around the old man, making this land glow with youthful colors.
What is even more rare is that this documentary is about storytelling. Use the editing and conversion between shots to tell the story wonderfully. The most thrilling thing is that the armored crickets prey on the red-billed queria cubs and are finally killed and eaten by their kind. The real world of wild animals is much crueler than human imagination.
The slow motion and sound effects of the documentary movement enhance the audience's sensory experience. When the giraffes are fighting, they deliberately record the scenes of two males competing with each other in slow motion, adding to the sound effects of fighting and fighting each other, with the solemn and sad background music. At first, the giraffe's graceful walking posture was like a European aristocratic lady. I didn't expect that this taciturn "lady" who wandered around would also be irritable, and the contrast between the front and back pictures subverted the previous imagination.
This documentary has temperature. In the dry season of the African grasslands, the baby elephant who was still breast-feeding starved to death. The elephant mother left the group to accompany her child. The fate was so helpless. No matter how she called, the baby elephant would never wake up again. The game above is based on the price of life. The camera is getting farther and farther, farther and farther, leaving only the female elephant walking alone on the deserted grassland...walking...
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