Recommended from "o brother, where art thou". At first, I just thought raising geese scientifically (this film is not difficult in English, without subtitles, I thought goose was a goose haha), I thought it was much more boring than "Three Kings". It's really impressive to see the back. The car accident at the beginning was really what the plot needed, and the whole process was cured later. I think of the very early film "Wolf's Children Rain and Snow", which is a bit similar to that.
Can't help but think of Gojoren's song "The Ideal of the World". The decisive and kind-hearted Amy and his ingenious father saved a litter of geese together. Whether it was the officers who commanded the fighter plane, or the people of Canada and the United States, they all affirmed them. (By the way, hunting, as long as it is not excessive hunting, is actually a great respect for the prey and nature. Because people hunted for a living before they far surpassed other species. Over-intensive farming is much worse than hunting. A negative portrayal, perhaps showing something of environmentalism.)
When Confucius talked about benevolence, he said that benevolence is a matter between two people. In fact, there are a lot of such things in this film, and there is a feeling of benevolence entering bravery. Maybe my mother left my father because I needed to quit addiction. Mother raised Amy and treated Amy well. Amy finds Xiao Yanzi, also like a kind of benevolence - she is like the mother of Yanzi, taking care of every wild goose. Amy gradually learned that her father was very kind to her, and that her father was also a very good person. When he broke into the air base, he wanted to protect him. (amy and father) In fact, Amy's stepmother is a very good person. It can be said that she is the unsung hero of the whole film. The good ones are a little unreal. But yes, such good people do exist. In Amy's small town, the officer was actually quite nice, and he was also nice to Amy. After the aircraft was built in the later period, everyone who watched TV, like the old grandmother, had a connection with Amy. With more "benevolence", they can save this nest of geese together without fear of the excavator of the civil engineering boss. (After all, if amy got a litter of white pigeons, the officers at the f15 base would be utterly happy.)
Geese are very loyal animals, loyal to their mates, to the creatures they see for the first time, and to the place where they were born. It's amazing to have a true story about the adoption of a litter of geese in such a single-parent family.
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