However, the film was so real that I was very surprised. Even when I watched it, I forgot that it was a cartoon spreading hope, not an apocalyptic science fiction film that awakened the world.
The earth after 800 years is full of rubbish, lifeless and silent.
Only one abandoned robot cleans up the trash left by humans day after day.
In the ruins, in the trash, chasing the memories of the human past, slowly forming humanity from toys and tools. Just like when we were young, holding a tool that we don’t know what it is, imagine and study it.
Does wisdom or emotion come first?
Robots have no emotions but they can have wisdom. Only when humans have more advanced wisdom can they have emotions?
So, with the improvement of intelligence, can robots have feelings? Other animals without wisdom, are their feelings real? Or is it just a program written in DNA? Who can be completely sure that human emotions are just a program written in DNA? It's just more complicated and changeable... The
director may not think of these problems, but in the film he can see a possibility. The formation process of WALLE's feelings is very natural and real, 700 years of loneliness, 700 years of silent thinking, thinking about human society through things that do not last forever, and finally made it learn to be lonely. Then, naturally, I fell in love with the EVA that broke this loneliness.
All robots have their own mission and must not be violated. Because human beings are too comfortable and getting fatter, they can only sit on automatic chairs and live by the services of robots.
Unlike many other science fiction films, the robots in the film have no collective riots, no harm to humans, no attempt to replace humans, and they are the masters of their own affairs.
They changed a way to replace humans.
They replace humans to work, they replace humans to think, they even replace humans to love... The
poor human body is degraded, the brain is degraded, and even the emotions are degraded.
All of this is so real, and it truly depicts the current state of human existence, relying on machines to work for us, and computers to think for us... The film only exaggerates this state of existence a bit, and then puts it 800 years later.
The captain suddenly used a trick to refute the robot and regain control of the spacecraft, perhaps reminding us of something that robots can’t think about, a little creativity, etc., the unique advantages of human beings.
Until the end, when WALLE continued to work with dull eyes, looking at EVA's sad expression, I really thought that WALLE would really not wake up, and I really went back to work like this. Because the hard disk was replaced, 700 years of loneliness, and the love that I just learned just now, just disappeared...No matter how beautiful the feelings are, they must also reside in a material carrier. Once this fragile material carrier is destroyed, the feelings will follow. Disappeared...
But no, he came back, he took her hand.
It turns out that everything is just the director's sensational tactics. After all, this story is still a fairy tale, and it must have a happy ending. Later, human beings re-discovered the beauty of life, regained a healthy body, and lived happily.
The gloomy appearance of realism packs a romantic dream.
For the first time, I felt from the bottom of my heart that such a story should have a happy ending.
Maybe it's a kind of reincarnation.
When I was young, I liked fairy tales and happy endings.
Slightly older, I think the reunion is too fake to coax the children, not deep.
To be bigger, I feel that no matter whether the world is complete or not, everyone wants to be complete. Some stories should end in a happy ending.
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