Real-world fables dressed in fairy tales

Jaime 2022-03-22 09:02:38

Under the guise of naive and romantic fairy tales and fables, there are revelations of the oppression caused by patriarchal rule, reconciliation ideas for misunderstandings and oppositions brought about by perspective and cognitive limitations, and more expressive in the existing highly repressed social environment. People's yearning for spiritual freedom and freedom of behavior.

1. Patriarchal oppression. The parents refused to communicate, refused to empathize, and used "I am for your own good" to morally kidnap. It seems to pay, but in fact it is slavery. It shows the biggest pain point in the communication between children and parents

2. To resolve opposition. The limitation of one's own perspective and cognition leads to misunderstanding and confrontation, which is a very common phenomenon in life. It often occurs between parents and children, between teachers and students, between employees and bosses. Most of the confrontations and conflicts stem from "you won't feel pain if you don't wear shoes on your feet", and the film gives the easiest way to reconcile - kindness and tolerance. In the absence of hard evidence, not malicious speculation is a small step in your relationship with the opposite party.

3. Yearning for freedom. 996, social animals, all point to the dual in freedom of our body and spirit. In today's highly repressed social environment, "Wolf Walker" provides such a dream of realizing dual freedom of spirit and body, and it also gives people a beautiful spirit. Trust it.

Smack-resistant, chewy. Ps This is my first film review, dedicated to you ~ "Wolf Walker"

View more about Wolfwalkers reviews

Extended Reading
  • Waino 2022-03-19 09:01:07

    Ned has become a wolf! ! ! !

  • Elda 2022-03-27 09:01:18

    I am special! ! Blow it up! ! ! Perfect! ! The picture, plot, original sound, and settings (in no particular order) are all perfect, and the beauty is beyond the sky! Hearing and vision are invincible! ! Once again, it deeply reflects that "what belongs to the nation is what belongs to the world". I don't see many Irish cartoons, but they all catch up with the very heavy motif + exquisite Celtic soundtrack + magnificent vision like fantasy. This motif reminds me of Avatar, the habitual life of our self-conceited safety is nothing but a dungeon, and true freedom is often on the "other side" of our unknown, feared, and even hostile. Also because of refusal to understand and believe, many times the so-called "for your own good" is purely to cover up one's ignorance and vulnerability, so as to make oneself feel comfortable. This kind of conflict is very common in cartoons, but every time the conflict is resolved, I feel so warm? After all, I may never encounter such an opportunity in my life.