The film tells the story of a grown-up Christopher Robin caught in a midlife crisis, and his childhood animal companions walk into the human world to try to help him find a better childhood.
Childhood Christopher Robin (shares a hilarious tea party with all his chums: Winnie the Pooh, Tigger, Piglet, Eeyore, Mama Kangaroo, Bean and Owl, all in plush stuff where real animals talk Animals. Tea party with laughter, cake, and (of course) lots of honey. But it's also sundown, and the farewell party marks Christopher Robin's farewell to his magical forest animal companion. He's starting to come of age.
After Robin left Hundred Acre Wood, he went to a boarding school and was severely reprimanded by his teacher for drawing a picture of Pooh in class. In a blink of an eye, he grew up, met and married his wife. And then had a daughter who became a father. Later, he fought in the war and later worked as an "efficiency specialist" at a London luggage company, a very demanding occupation. In addition to exhausting his mind to complete the tasks assigned by his boss, he also had to find time to spend with his wife Evelyn and daughter Madeleine. Robin loves his family very much, but this kind of life inevitably makes him feel a little suffocated.
His boss is a rich second generation who puts profit and efficiency first. The boss often assigns him work and warns him: "There is a price to pay for realizing the dream, and there is no free lunch in the world." In order to maximize profits, the boss asked Robin to start laying off employees in the company. Robin, who has always been obedient, suddenly hesitated this time.
At this moment, Robin's childhood playmate Winnie the Pooh suddenly reappeared in front of his eyes and asked him to do him a favor. Obviously, Pooh still regards Robin as the simple boy before, which makes Robin feel a little at a loss.
Pooh misses Robin very much. One morning Pooh woke up and found that the Hundred Acre Forest was foggy and his friends were gone, so Pooh decided to climb out of the Hundred Acre Forest through the tree hole that Robin climbed into when he was a child to ask Robin for help.
Climbing down the tree hole to London, I met Robin who was in turmoil. When he grew up, he was not as innocent and brilliant as Pooh imagined. Robin was very impatient with Pooh, and also disliked this old friend who got in the way of the house. Dirty, looking at the messed up kitchen, Robin decides to send Pooh back to Hundred Acre Wood.
On the way back to the Hundred Acre Forest, Pooh greeted passersby happily but scared passers-by and knocked them down on a telephone pole. Robin had to play a snooze game with Pooh, Pooh pretended to be like an ordinary doll. Just passing by a small vendor, Pooh asked Robin to buy himself a balloon.
After returning to the Hundred Acre Forest, they lost their way in the thick fog and unknowingly came to the territory of the proboscis monster. Pooh was very scared, because he heard that the proboscis would steal people's happiness since he was a child. Pooh wanted to hug Robin for a sense of security, but Robin avoided and told Pooh that it was all fake. Pooh had to take Robin in a circle outside the territory of the Proboscis Monster. Robin was very angry and lost his temper at Pooh when he found out. Pooh was sad that it just didn't want Robin to be hurt. Pooh said sorry and left. Robin found that Pooh was missing and started shouting Pooh's name in the forest, but there were strange noises around him. Robin was a little scared to run, but fell into the deep pit and fainted.
When Robin woke up, the sky turned clear. Robin wandered aimlessly in the forest and saw Eeyore floating in the river. They found other friends together, and also found that the abnormal noise in the forest was just a broken weather vane. The friends were still very scared, so Robin had to play a one-man show to make everyone believe that he defeated the proboscis monster. The little friends were reunited as they were when they were young, and they spent the carefree night under the big tree as they were when they were young. Robin woke up to find that he was late for work and hurriedly left the Hundred Acre Forest.
The friends found that Tigger took Robin's information out of his briefcase and replaced it with leaves from the Hundred Acre Forest. It wanted Robin to remember them, but Pooh remembered that Robin had told him that if the information was lost He'll be eaten by the smelly weasel. The friends climbed out of the Hundred Acre Forest to save Robin, and became friends with Robin's daughter who was on vacation in her hometown. They decided to go back to London together to deliver the papers to Robin.
He went through all the difficulties and finally sent Winnie the Pooh back to that fairy tale. But unfortunately, I accidentally lost my work files. Winnie the Pooh and his friends who found out about it, with the help of Christopher Robin's daughter, are bent on sending the documents back. But in the end it failed.
It was their actions that made Christopher Robin gradually find himself and understand his family and friends. And things at work have solutions. In the end, the story has a happy ending.
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