When the music at the end sounded, I just wanted to ask, the children who came back from the island, how are you? Ralph's last cry, was it the fear of almost dying, the shocking sympathy of his companion's tragic death, and the powerlessness of his companion's psychological distortion but unable to change? As for Jack and his gang, when they return to civilized society, can they still adapt? The savagery in their hearts has been completely aroused, and their hands are stained with the blood of their two companions. Can they still live as normal as before? For the children who made this film, what kind of impact will your hearts be subjected to after experiencing such a film? After frantically jumping around the bonfire, will you still be innocent and coquettish when you come home, blinking clean and penetrating eyes?
Sometimes I think that the shock that these children bring to adults may be great, stronger than a film that admits original sin, but, the children who have experienced this, are they okay?
Each of us was once a child. Although we were pure and kind at the beginning, we were cruel to the weak. Do you remember the insects whose wings and legs were broken by us, and the birds and animals who were once bullied what. Natural selection is something engraved in biological genes, and sin is often easier to bring sweetness than kindness. The key is to guide. Open the heart door and ask, the child who lives in my heart, how are you? Have you become sinful and brutal, or are you still holding on like Ralpha?
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