Inside the high wall, a group of human beings live a peaceful and happy life. Suddenly one day disaster strikes. The trio of teenagers witnessed the tragic death of their relatives, and only then did they realize that the world inside the wall was not the real world. It's a bit too "giant" at the beginning. The difference is that under the background of the orphanage, the trio of teenagers and the enemy 3v1, neither side has strong support, so there is no grand fighting scene, the focus is on the game of IQ and thinking about human nature. The animation gave all the love to the protagonist, Emma is the little sun, Norman is a super-intelligent warm man, and Ray, a real man who bears the pain. The portrayal of my mother doesn't seem to be so serious. It is neither beautiful enough, nor perverted enough, and even not as strong as the image of a nun, which makes people feel "plain" from her body, but after seeing it, I realized that maybe What the author wants to express is "desperation" and "numbness". The plot in the middle was a bit slow, but in the last four episodes, it suddenly improved. Norman ships, what exactly do you see behind the door? Was he sacrificed? Did Emma really give up? Did Ray really set himself on fire? Can all the children escape successfully? Sure enough, this kind of reversal and then a 360-degree reversal of Thomas' mid-air rotation is the correct way to open the suspense! ! Anyway, the focus of Neverland is to torture humanity and preach freedom. The nun left the keys to the children before she died. Isabella looked at Emma's jumping back, and finally fulfilled what she could not accomplish in her girlhood, and finally achieved "like a mother as ordinary as a mother." I love you", take care of the aftermath for them, and go back calmly to accept death. The nun and mother should be the two most perverted people in the whole series, but before they died, they still showed the kindness of human nature, and drove a tractor to my tear ducts.
In fact, this show answers a question I've always wanted to know, "How would it feel if humans and slaughterhouse animals switched places?" The answer is: "Despair". I'm not a vegetarian either, but I understand that we all eat meat and we are all guilty.
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