The first time I watched The Lion King was high school, which is to say, maybe twenty... years ago, light remembers the episode. At that time, "Crazy English" was popular, small format, with tapes, and there was that song in one issue. Later, there was a domestic violence incident in the head, and the picture I made up was this: Can you feel the love tonight? Slap, slap in the face.
This time I have to come back with something meaningful. When I walked into the live-action version with my daughter, no, it should be the real animal version of "The Lion King" movie theater, I secretly made up my mind.
A very inspiring work on parenting.
As soon as the 3D version opened, the children next door cheered loudly, "Mom, I can touch it, I can touch it!" From the negative side, it shows the reason why you can't make loud noises while watching a movie. In addition, the essence is mainly concentrated on the part of Mufasa's teaching son.
Being a king requires not only power and majesty, but also love. Not just to hunt, but to give. Life is a trap, crossed out, is a "closed loop". Although I eat antelope zebra now, but when I die, it will turn into grass and be eaten by their offspring. Although I think, when the old lion turns into grass, the descendants of the antelope and zebra have already been eaten by the young lions. Mufasa, you are credit card fraud.
I hope my daughter can understand this truth well. She's the king after all, and I'm the antelope.
The parenting experience of The Lion King is stratified and divided into groups. If your child is Simba, you need to learn the values and strategies of being a king; if your child is a warthog, you can learn the cynicism and happy life of Hakuna Matata; even the children of North Korea can learn Coyotes have been hungry, KEEP HUNGRY. There are men and women, all skin colors, multi-ethnic, all people, a movie that is absolutely correct.
In the final analysis, it is how to teach people to be sons (daughters).
Kotaro Isaka wrote about his father's parenting practices in his new collection of essays.
Do you know the story of the mouse? Two mice were electrocuted. One will be charged immediately, and the other will be charged lightly and then violently. After a period of repetition, the second mouse died faster.
Kotaro Isaka was always worried about trivial matters, and his father wanted to say: always worrying about things that haven't happened will shorten his life. Do you know the story of the mouse? As a result, when Kotaro Isaka heard this, he was worried that he would have to listen to the story again.
Isaka Kotaro was successful. He managed to become my favorite writer.
Another Japanese who especially likes to write about dad is Takeshi Kitano. As a painter, Kitano Takeshi's father was cowardly, alcoholic, beat his wife and children, and taught his children to be content with their duties and not to have any unreasonable thoughts. Takeshi Kitano later defined the role of a father as follows: "A father should be the first stumbling block a child encounters on the road of life. A father should not be afraid of being hated by his own children."
Takeshi Kitano was successful. He managed to become my favorite director.
Judging from the results, Simba's father, Isaka Kotaro's father, and Kitano Takeshi's father were all successful. I also did learn one of the most important parenting lessons, that you have to have a good son.
Good enough to come out of the mud and not stain. So every nonsense of the father seems to shine with wisdom, and every fool's behavior can see the rich tenacity. I'm not blacking Deng Chao's "Galaxy Tutorial", after all, I haven't watched it either.
View more about The Lion King reviews