The film happily includes elements that satisfy audiences of all ages, and game fans, sweets control and technical emperors can all get what they need. But as a cartoon that has to take into account a large number of young audiences, if you want to find how strong humanistic care in it, it is no different from catching a toad. Although the film seems to start with a heavy topic, when a person is thirty years old but dissatisfied with the monotonous and ordinary daily life, what choice should be made. But the depth of this disguise is only used to unfold the story. After that, the development of the plot did not give the protagonist a chance to think and make choices. When the arrogant and sweet Lolita is framed and ridiculed by the group, the protagonist is not that complicated as a simple uncle. If there is a war between heaven and man, I am afraid that the audience in the theater will not agree. Under this circumstance, let the discussion of any profound topic go aside. When the uncle finally returned to his own life, the answer he got was no different from the beginning of the film: Choosing to accept reality can make every day afterwards a little better. As for the difference, it is more tenderness and happiness, which can make ordinary days less difficult.
Unlike cartoons with younger core audience groups such as Ice Age, the film uses more dialogue to entertain the audience, which makes the film’s laughter greatly compromised for Chinese audiences. The audience had to stare at the subtitles and constant ruminations to barely understand the laughter of Hero's Duty and Hero's Dirty, while the experience of watching movies became fragmented. In order to make up for this shortcoming, great efforts were made in translation of the film. If the audience can't understand the American preschoolers' cursing on the street, watching the Chinese version may be a good choice.
Finally, the movie has easter eggs. But this easter egg is too short-lived, and most of the audience who have watched the credits have not recovered, it has already banged and disappeared into the black screen. When it comes to the aftertaste, it is like a Disney staff member who, after handing in a proud answer, responded with a self-deprecating and confident smile in the face of the applause it deserved.
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