Does change mean good things?

Kari 2022-03-21 09:01:45

So funny!

Barry is not willing to be an ordinary bee. It has excellent speech eloquence, and even makes friends with humans in violation of regulations. He even went to court to sue humans, vowing to recover the fruits of labor that should have been bees for the bee family.

It was hilarious to see Barry go to his graduation ceremony, and it was hilarious to put his pointed tail in a drill to get a little sharper and fly out the door. In their bee kingdom, they drive, go to school, and go from elementary school to college for nine days. Barry also chats and drinks coffee with human Venassa, and asks Venassa to help the bees with the lawsuit. Humans don't seem to find it very earth-shattering about talking bees. At the end of the movie, even more than n bees helped a plane land safely! Great imagination brings great surprises.

I have watched a lot of animal-themed cartoons, and some have laughed at them. This little bee's story seems to imply something. Bees are destined to work their whole lives until they die. Once a job is chosen, it will be done for a lifetime. Barry hates this kind of work! I hate the closed life of staying in the hive. So it flew out of the hive with the honey beekeepers. The sky was so blue, the air was so fresh, and the flowers were so beautiful! It turns out that the outside world is so wonderful, even though it is an adventure, it is such a wonderful experience to be almost killed by a human being! Ugh, Barry loves it!

However, Barry also discovered that people were "appropriating" the work of bees, property that originally belonged to bees. So, the lawsuit between bees and humans was opened, and the bees won! Should this be the end of the story? The general story is just like that. Animals fight with humans. Animals use their wisdom to win after a series of efforts. The audience should also applaud and cheer for these brave little animals. But……

Human honey is all owned by bees. The bees who were busy doing their jobs don't have to work anymore. They eat and sleep, eat when they sleep, and bask in the sun when they are free, so soft! Bees no longer have to do bee work, and life seems to be very comfortable and good. However, the plants are not pollinated by bees, and there is no flowering or fruiting, which affects the lives of animals and humans, and the ecological balance is threatened! Are Barry's previous efforts right or wrong? When the last batch of flowers withered, Barry called on the bee family to do their own work, and the bees must be very bees! As the bees pollinate all the way, the originally gray city becomes gorgeous and colorful, and the mood gradually opens up...

Life has not changed, is it boring? Very bored? Seeking change? Flying out of the original world, encountering beautiful and wonderful, changing the trajectory of life, life seems to be beautiful. But life is gradually changing, maybe it's getting worse, and I don't know... Should I rest on my laurels, or move forward? In the film, the bees changed their 2,700-year life pattern, becoming no longer bees, bringing comfort, and finally the impact of the ecological balance must affect themselves. At the end of the film, the bees returned to their original life. So, have bees changed? And has the dialogue between humans and animals, and the dialogue with ecology, achieved a positive meaning? Some people say that this American film "enslaves" Americans intellectually, does not seek change, and does its job faithfully.

The bee has always been used as a metaphor for a model worker and a model for collaborative work. Bees have to do a lot of small work. In the film, the bee protagonist Barry mentioned in a line:

The way we do things may not be favored by you,
because making honey requires a lot of bees to do some very small work,
but let me tell you these small things
If you do it well,
it can also make a
big difference more than we think.
That's why I want to call the bees back
to do what we do best,
work together
like this That's the way of bees
We won't cut corners,
we'll together,
we have the same black and yellow skin, we
'll work together

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Extended Reading

Bee Movie quotes

  • Barry B. Benson: Tivo. You can just freeze live TV? That's insane.

    Vanessa: What, you don't have anything like that?

    Barry B. Benson: We have "Hivo", But it's a disease. It's a horrible, horrible disease.

  • Vanessa: Why don't you just fly everywhere? Isn't it faster?

    Barry B. Benson: Flying is exhausting. Why don't you humans just run everywhere, isn't that faster?

    Vanessa: I see your point.