The same is true for Mr. Ha. As an otaku in the industrial revolution, he tried to isolate the industrial age with layers of door locks. Instead, he was materialized more thoroughly, and all kinds of machinery had armed his mind. It's hard to tell if the Industrial Revolution is a part of his life or if he is a part of the Industrial Revolution.
Industry brought handy and fast machinery, but they were cold and lifeless. Mr. Ha has a way to save himself. Every day, he turns on a light and straightens the pictures on the wall one by one. However, the light seemed to be mocking him again, and it had to be turned on and off repeatedly before it would send out a little yellow warmth; even Mr. Ha doubted the existence of the good past recorded in the photos, his obsessive-compulsive fingers would be lit every day. Straighten them, and even when straightened, they still look crooked. He repeats these actions every day and becomes the basis for his existence.
Every day he eats, reads and types, goes to the balcony to play with his mechanical flowers, watches an outdated TV, repeats the same mistakes, and regularly turns his head into a clock. The passage of time in his life; on the other hand, the clock on the wall is ticking to show the anguish and suffering of life.
Until Mr. Ha took in a mechanical stray dog, time began to have his heartbeat and emotions. In fact, the foreign object of the dog is a metaphor for the seamlessness and selfishness and greed of the industrial revolution. With the help of Mr. Ha, the dog released the magic of the industrial revolution. occupy his living space. Until one day, the huge dog completely destroyed the order of his life, and the house became crumbling. At this moment, Mr. Ha woke up from his nightmare and decisively picked up the drill, trying to resist like the Industrial Revolution.
At this time, there are only two paths in front of Mr. Ha: either dismember the dog and return to his original life, but he chose another path, complete the dog, move house, and change to a larger abandoned space to load dog. At this time, the time in his head seemed to stop moving, showing the last touch of warmth in the entire industrial revolution. Indeed, Mr. Ha sacrificed his own interests to fulfill the dog.
Is this only the meaning revealed by this animation? It seems simple. The final ending is open-ended. In the so-called new home, Mr. Ha is sitting comfortably on the sofa, and the huge dog is shaking and roaring from the house, which also ruthlessly warns this greedy, insatiable, The mechanical dog that symbolizes the industrial revolution will become even bigger, and the future of Mr. Ha, that is, the future of mankind in the industrial revolution, is waiting to die.
The overexpansion of the industrial revolution will eventually be a silent tragedy.
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