6.5/10, G. The first reaction I got after watching it was, "The material that I shot alone is too strong, how can one person be so fierce?" Later, I found out that there were seven people in the camera (think about it, or whoever shot the cast would change the water What an angry picture)
"One year" is insignificant in human life, but it is the life of an octopus. This sense of time in different lives is really wonderful. Therefore, just like the sun is not the center of the universe, it is highly unlikely that humans, a three-dimensional animal, can understand the mysteries of the universe. We are the most intelligent life on earth, but in the face of higher dimensional life, aren't we also an octopus.
It feels like watching a Plato love story. "My love is such a one-of-a-kind little genius."
A beautiful story told with mature narrative techniques. From the perspective of ordinary people, through a specific and subtle point, let the audience follow the protagonist to enjoy the beautiful scenery, spy on nature, learn relevant marine knowledge, and then elevate it to people and life, people and nature. Really eye-opening after watching it. The film is also in line with today's fashionable background of environmental protection and the public's utilitarian brain circuit ("understanding nature" also has real benefits for "my life"), and finally comes a hopeful happy ending Well, luckily it's a documentary)
What I don't like is that when introducing octopus, people's subjective emotions are too strong, and the soundtrack is also full of emotion-oriented. Or use "human thinking" to explain "octopus behavior". Octopus eating crab?️ is a normal meal, but shark eating octopus is a thrilling disaster. But for sharks and crabs, it's also a meal and a disaster. It would be nice if only the objective facts of the octopus behavior were presented, and the audience could judge for themselves the purpose of the behavior. But such a film will inevitably flow into the narcissistic niche
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