Live like that penguin

Damien 2022-03-25 09:01:18

This is a movie not about Antarctica, although it takes place in Antarctica. This is a movie about how a person lives. Of course it happened in Antarctica, which made the story more real and three-dimensional. Taking the South Pole as the base point further highlights the reality of these people chasing their dreams. Everyone in Antarctica has a home behind them, and they are the top people in their profession. Their experiences are extremely rich, seeing the world through a tube for several days, intersecting with the flames of war. Perhaps because their lives are too rich and exciting, the world here can no longer satisfy them. And only that calm blue and white world is their true destination. Observing the uncle of the penguin, his words are very few, because he rarely communicates with people, obviously he is used to it, and he does not need to communicate with people. This kind of loneliness is not easy to bear, and this kind of loneliness is not something you and I can enjoy. The group of people surveying the volcano, the snow solidified on the beard of the person in charge, but the joy did not stop, and they were immersed in the cause they loved. I think their lives should be much simpler and more focused.
The penguin walking alone is the most touching part of this documentary. In fact, they are also the penguins living in Antarctica. Like telling the director, you put it back, and it still leaves. They came to the most impossible place to live to seek the hope of life, and they used their own power to maintain the holy tower in their hearts. No hesitation.
This is the first time I heard the sound of a seal, because it is in Antarctica, so its sound is different from that of ordinary animals. Maybe they don't want to be in the company of these ordinary animals subconsciously. Also, they are something to be proud of.
When you see pictures of New Zealand in those holes, popcorn, and the remains of human existence. The question of that student was raised again. The topic I am most afraid to talk about is a black hole. Every time I think about it, it can swallow my thoughts. My thoughts enter a bottomless dark hole, and I don’t know where the answer is. It's just that we are really small, and we are just inconspicuous particles of the entire universe. Without the earth, we can exist very well. Without the earth, we are just a phantom. Scientists are always the most pessimistic people, because they know too much and understand our situation more clearly, so they become the group of people who are the most apprehensive and afraid of nature. How ridiculous that our unscrupulousness comes from ignorance.
Those neutrinos known as detectable ghosts. Being a science student is really humiliating to be popular with science, but it makes sense for someone like me to think about it. They are like things that live in another world, but they actually exist in our world. I am really an admirer of paradoxes, a complex of paradoxical rationales. I can imagine the beauty of the blue light emitted by two neutrinos colliding, but unfortunately this kind of thing that exists only in my head is called fantasy.
I hope you can be that penguin once and be a real dream catcher once.

View more about Encounters at the End of the World reviews

Extended Reading

Encounters at the End of the World quotes

  • Werner Herzog: It occurred to me that in the time that we spent with him in the greenhouse possibly three or four languages have died. In our efforts to preserve endangered species we seem to overlook something equally important. To me, it's a sign of a deeply disturbed civilization, where tree-huggers and whale-huggers in their weirdness are acceptable, while no one embraces the last speakers of a language.

  • Werner Herzog: For me, the best description of hunger is the description of bread. A poet said that once I think. For me, the best description of freedom is what you have in front of you. You're travelling a lot.