Good-looking cartoons are ranked very politically: unwilling to be reconciled to the arrangements of fate and immutable mediocre life, pursue individualism in the realization of self-worth and a different life; pursue fairness and justice, and oppose the naked exploitation and enslavement of human capitalists. Freedom; Barry is the heroism of wit, courage, generosity and perseverance running for bees around the world for investigation and defense; the charm of the bee barry's superhuman actually touched the heart of a beautiful human lady, and he would rather break up with human bf and be with bees Sharing candlelight dinners and drinking coffee together is romanticism; then there are obvious equality and fraternity, humanitarianism, animal environmentalism and theories about ecological balance... plus various funny and anthropomorphic 3D animations in the United States The scenes of imaginative, imaginative and childlike, so many elements are mixed together, it is simply a mess of the Northeast.
Humans lost the lawsuit and were sentenced to be free of all bees, repaid all the honey sold to bees, and never allowed to steal the honey that bees brewed hard. With the honey returned by humans, bees can sleep and play every day. Labor. The story has progressed here, and it seems to be perfect. But the bees "fallen" because they don't work, and because they don't pollinate, all the plants in the world wither (the logic of sweat). At this time, Barry realized the importance of ecological balance. After the flowers were extinct, the bees would no longer be able to make honey, and they would also be extinct. So, together with his human girlfriends, he used the last batch of flowers on the earth to save the world. The pollen is sucked out of these flowers, and then sprayed on the withered trees and grass, and then the world turns from the lead-grey Death Valley into the red and willow-green Garden of Eden (again, waterfall Khan).
Since then, the bees have restored the usual order of life and worked hard again. Even Barry, who hated only doing the same job all his life, was extremely proud and contented to be a little bee who "picked pollen"...Of course, the film didn't mention whether humans continued to "steal" honey. The question is, isn't this returning to the origin of the story? Isn’t it the beginning, when Barry wandered around all day and was unwilling to work, his parents told him, "Different jobs are just a matter of division of labor. Any seemingly ordinary job is great, important, and indispensable. . A lot of ordinary and trivial work of bees converge into a great career"?
In short, this movie is messy enough. Movies, especially cartoons, are better to be simple.
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