The Incredibles 2

Serenity 2022-03-16 09:01:02

The setting of the protagonist with super power has long been a character background that has been used badly in both movies and animations, which inevitably makes people a little tired of aesthetics. The highlight of this film is that it humanizes the role of superheroes in a way that we have almost never seen before, and creates a brand-new, very friendly way of creating superhuman characters. As an animated film, this film goes straight to the point from the very beginning. This is what audiences of this type of film are happy to see when they spend money to walk into the theater. Unsurprisingly, the film starts with a few minutes of excitement. Snippets to show off the protagonist's superpowers, and then a very American-style legal assumption is used to elicit the background of the story. Audiences who know a little about the principles of the US Constitution know that the judicial cases in the film are entirely possible in this country with a high degree of rule of law, and due to the system of case law, it may become a national judicial norm. In this way, the superheroes represented by the protagonist Bob were forcibly deprived of the right to use their superpowers by the government and lived in society in the way of ordinary people. This is quite similar to the book "Why the World Doesn't Need Superman" published by Clark Kent's girlfriend in "Superman" years after Superman left the earth. Regarding this, in the second part, the film did it through the mouth of the villain. A more in-depth explanation. Of course, thinking about this question is the business of a bunch of modern business philosophers.

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Extended Reading

Incredibles 2 quotes

  • Evelyn Deavor: The fact that you saved me doesn't make you right.

    Helen Parr: But it does make you alive.

  • Bob Parr: I can't stear it or stop it, and the Underminer's escaped.

    Helen Parr: We'll have to stop it... BOB! The monorail!