In terms of plot, this story is adapted from a classic novel, greatly simplifying the relationship between good and evil. Tiger Sheri Khan became the number one villain. He took pleasure in hurting and killing the weak, and had suffered from human losses, so he vowed to chase down the little boy Mowgli to the end. King Louis, the orangutan, acts as the second villain, creating another challenge for Mowgli. The gigantic orangutan king occupies the castle and is enshrined by thousands of monkeys. He does not worry about eating and clothing, doing whatever he wants, but admiring the secret of the psychedelic and deadly red flower-the "flame". Its used. Villain No. 3 is a giant python. When Mowgli picked up the giant snake skin that the python had dropped from the forest, it heralded a dangerous approach. However, he had no feeling, was tempted by the python's rhetoric and charming breath, and almost killed him.
There are two important people in your side. One is the stern mentor Black Panther. I picked him up from a young age, took him to practice running and avoiding as soon as he appeared, and escorted him out of the forest all the way. I don't want him to use human skills in the forest. The other is a lazy brown bear. The brown bear rescued Mowgli from the python, and used his expertise to obtain the honey on the cliff that he had coveted for a long time. Mowgli cooperated with him tacitly, and his free personality made the two of them friends. Strolling in the forest, swimming in the river, and relaxing singing, brought the most soothing and wonderful fragments of the whole play. Black panthers and brown bears accompany Mowgli to grow up and face difficulties. The parents who adopted him among the wolves didn't write much, but they insisted on protecting him. The little wolf pup followed him, and he often missed him after he left.
And the little boy himself, on the one hand, is brave, wit, smart and kind; on the other hand, he is naughty, stubborn and confused in the process of growing up. Neil Sisi, a young boy selected from all over the world, really gave a brilliant performance without any trace. Seeing him running through the forest, it is completely believed that this child who grew up in the forest truly belongs to this world and completes this splendid journey of self-exploration.
Compared with the richness and classics of the original, overall, there are still some problems in the plot of the story. The adaptation of the story has become a pure black-and-white opposition, and indeed there are many plot settings that seem unreasonable. Why didn't Sher Khan come to harass him during the whole process of Mowgli's growth? He must wait until the day when the drought dries up and the Heping Rock emerged before making an official announcement by the river? Do the wolves actually have no greater ability to protect Mowgli? When they read the "Law of the Forest" aloud and regarded it as their standard, I thought the wolves would have much energy? Who can this law constrain, and what does it reveal? Or, this is just a history of the boy's growth, and this law is just the big environment he faces?
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