I originally saw the version of Narnia filmed by the BBC. It was really ugly. I remember falling asleep after watching it for a while. If this kind of fantasy is not supported by technology, it has no meaning to be visualized at all. This movie version of "Narnia" is considered a high film, which can make me watch it happily. The beavers, Mr. Fox, half-goat, half-horse, messenger tree...These things are all beautiful and cute. A few big shots made me quite comfortable. The shot that Aslan and the White Witch had swept across the Great Wasteland before the battle was particularly flying. The White Witch’s house is so beautiful, I am very brazen to say that it is my house. I also want to pinch a handful of Aslan, which is fluffy, so I want to hold it. The beaver couples that often appear are also very successful. The animals are humanized, and the audience is very weak (this weakness is not derogatory, people have the ambition to assimilate other things in their hearts, and I especially like the beaver couples). This method is always Can please the audience. But in the final analysis, high-tech is still the most important, most important, without high-tech, everything is nonsense.
It's a pity that this is a movie without love (although, maybe it's my misunderstanding, I think the part where the White Witch kills Aslan is quite ambiguous). Four brothers and sisters in Britain after the war. The state of society and the balance of power in a family at that time were lightly inserted into the narrative. In fact, the most touching thing is that the four people took the risk and the king became the same, and finally got out of the closet. For them, centuries have passed, but for outsiders, it is only a second. Just like the previous two years, I heard a rumor that the finale of "Dora A Dream" was over. As a result, there was no Dora A Dream, no bamboo dragonflies and time tunnels. Nobita was an autistic child, and everything was him. Fantasy. He had a dream and then went to school with his schoolbag on his back. How uncomfortable, I was. That kind of uncertainty about the real world suddenly broke out, and my heart was broken. But the story of "Narnia" is actually more heartbreaking, but I am not touched after watching it. So this movie is still a bit short, but it's worth watching after all, for the sake of high technology.
Of course also for Tilda Swinton, one of my favorite actresses. The white witch in Narnia.
I like her performance in "Young Adam" the most.
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