Willing to be an unsung hero

Reagan 2022-01-28 08:26:28

This is the second time to watch cartoons in the name of accompanying children. This film is not suitable for my 6 and a half year old daughter. The graphics are a bit chaotic, the plot is a bit more complicated, and the characters aren't very vivid (Is the Squirrel Squirrel a selfish loner, or my kind-hearted hero? The zoo leader Raccoon is a dictator over power?), no I know what my daughter can feel from this film.

I have pity on Sally the squirrel for his loneliness after being expelled from the zoo, and admire his maverick "waving his hand without taking a cloud", and most importantly, he is an open-minded, selfish but altruistic nameless Hero, he gave up fame and fortune to the ordinary and foolish Gleason. I watched the same movie in college, where someone was willing to sacrifice himself to become the hero who showed his own strength in front of others. At the end of the film, when Andy the squirrel once again expressed his approval to Sally, Sally said indifferently: Success belongs to everyone.

How many serene Selys are there in reality? How much of Sally has been used to make it to the sky in one step?





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Extended Reading

The Nut Job quotes

  • Grayson: This squirrel is a hero!

  • Surly: Okay, we get a crew, we break in, but we do it my way...