Watching "Project Hummingbird" yesterday, a pair of cousins developed and implemented a "great plan": to build a straight fiber from Kansas to New York, which can shorten the transmission speed to 16 milliseconds, thereby winning huge money in securities trading profit. The protagonist, also known as Curly Jesse, has a strong executive power. Good fortune makes people, the former strong female boss of the company looks for a Chinese genius, and completes the optical fiber plan first, faster than 16 milliseconds. Jesse was tasked with concealing his stomach cancer. He was obsessed with his efforts. He fell short of success. He was furious and confused at the signal tower built by his opponent. Like Zhou Yu, Zhuge Liang was so angry that he vomited blood. During the excavation, they encountered a farm. The owners lived a traditional farming life, refused to modernize, and refused to pass the fast optical cable through the farm. At the end of the movie, Jesse and his cousin came to the farm in the rain to help carry the food. After finishing the work, I sat in the granary and watched the rain fall slowly. Those who seek the speed of hummingbirds end up doing nothing and staring blankly at the rain. A few minutes before the end, I thought there would be a reversal, and the protagonist suddenly achieved the success of his dreams, fame and fortune. However, the endless rain curtain falling in slow motion is the end. I thought it was an inspirational story, but it was actually a philosophical story of life. A while ago, I often wondered: "Why do people live?" Can failure and success define life? In the sixteen milliseconds of a hummingbird flapping its wings, enjoy life to the fullest, be it success, failure, or nothing. #watching notes#
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