Not good, very bad.
This female hero can be seen as a side story. This is the story of the female hero playing the rope, the female hero learning to fly, the female hero and her best friend tearing up, the female hero saving the world with mouth guns, the female hero going crazy and a strange man Remember like this, Jia Fang's revenge of the heroine, Aladdin's magic lamp of the heroine.
Give you a plan, go for the best plan. Still to be clear, I like this movie, especially the portrayal of the leopard girl, and it is generally worth watching. Whether it's fighting or the role of the male protagonist, it's all extra points for me. I'm not convinced that others take these two points. But this movie is destined to not be rated too high. Personally, the biggest reason for not giving a high score is logical inconsistency. The key prop in the film is the wishing stone. It can realize any desire of any person, and it is a shortcut for human beings to desire. This corresponds to Diana's attempt to cheat at the beginning of the movie and take shortcuts to win the game. Antiope taught Diana that the victory obtained by taking shortcuts is an illusion and a lie. Even if he wins, he loses the character of a warrior. The climax of the movie is meant to correspond to it. Diana takes on the role of Antiope, educating the world that shortcuts are a worse way, and that desire and cost are equal. But at the end of the film, Diana persuaded the world to give up her wish with her mouth and the reason was that "this world is already very beautiful." I believe you. What is even more unconvincing is that people all over the world actually believed it and gave up their own wishes. This plot is not only fake, but also turns such a good scene at the beginning of the movie into a waste drama that purely shows special effects. Screenwriter, tell you, what is real human nature. The real humanity is: even if the world gets worse because of human wishes, nobody cares, human beings will only continue to make wishes to make up for the bug caused by the previous wish, and so on in an infinite loop until destruction. This is how the inner volume is rolled up. It's not that Diana can't save the world by preaching, the key is you have to get to the point. Diana, what you want to tell everyone is not that the world was originally beautiful, but to tell everyone: "Stupid, oh no, dear human beings, your wishes are not free, they all come at a price, and in the end you make your own. When you get up, you fatten up that capitalist." People in the world like to prostitute for free, they don't like to gain it at a price, they don't like to lose it, and they don't like to be prostituted by others. Once Diana made this point clear, the logic would be much smoother. At the same time, God has become more aware of the nature of the world, but she is still willing to continue to embrace the beauty of this world for Steve, and the theme is sublimated. Too bad the writers are unreal. I don't believe she doesn't understand this truth, but she just doesn't want to dig into this story that could have been better. But why do I still want to recommend everyone to watch this movie? Because of the leopard Barbara. She is the most typical representative of all living beings, with low self-esteem, ordinary, small and transparent, and eager to have a little extraordinary life with some charm. The Wishing Stone was a new rule she discovered, a new way out, which gave her a chance to be reborn. She originally only paid a part of the price in exchange for what she wanted, and it was not completely out of balance and out of control. But Maxwell enjoyed this rule alone, and even became the rule itself, and he skillfully used this rule to transfer the price, which could not only realize his own wishes, but also let others bear the price. What is this behavior? The behavior of capitalists, the drama that is played out every day, our work, our money, our resources, are all played and applauded by capitalists. But when the capitalist becomes the rule itself, we have to abide by it, even maintain it. You don't play by the rules of the game, you lose more. There is a small detail, when Diana saw Barbara turned into an ugly panther girl, she was startled and said, "What have you done." Barbara said, "Even if I become like this, I don't want to lose Divine power." This "even" was used very delicately, indicating that Barbara didn't like her ugly appearance, but it was Maxwell who gave it to her. (Pay attention to the lines in the film, it was not her wish that Barbara became a leopard girl, but what Maxwell exchanged with other people's wishes.) Why does Barbara help Maxwell, not what Maxwell can bring him, but him The failure/bankruptcy will cost Barbara more. People are more afraid of losing than gaining. Ba Bara finally became a leopard girl. The "capitalist" gave her the "resources" she originally had, and she also became a "social animal" without knowing it, working for the rules. How ironic. What's even more ironic is that such an interpretation is not even the original intention of the film's creator, but this is how things will develop. The movie might not be worth it, but Leopard Girl deserves it. She is the most real person in the whole film. I hope that if this character can appear in the future, the screenwriter should dig her out and don't waste it.
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