As someone who is afraid of caterpillars and spiders...thanks for watching this movie

Freda 2022-09-23 08:09:33

There are a few scenes that are very profound:
1. At the beginning, from the nature, blue sky, white clouds, big trees (static), and then the camera moves to the insects (dynamic) in the grass. It is really a "microscopic world". I want to open a door, big Nature is the existence of these very tiny creatures~
2. The scene where the bird eats the ants is also very profound, especially the huge contrast of the birds is highlighted when the camera is taken upside down, just like us humans;
3. Where it rains, we feel extremely everyday What happened to the bugs looked like a disaster? !
4. The dung beetle turned out to be so stubborn and inspirational...
The shooting of many shots is very clever, the background music is very good, and the snail can be shot so romantically, it is really French~

After reading the impression:
As a person who is afraid of caterpillars and spiders I...
thought it was a popular science movie, like the animal world. . . . After overcoming the "caterpillar phobia", I have the urge to touch them after
watching it! (As long as you don’t get close to me?)
When you carefully integrate into it and see the world at close range, everything is magnified, and the scary bugs are not so scary. They are just living their own lives, and they all have the pressure to survive. Life is taken very seriously in their little world. Well, I feel that every animal is a world, all things are equal, and we should not look down on these animals. . .

Oh right. . . The caterpillar became less scary, but the spider became more scary hahaha

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Extended Reading

Microcosmos quotes

  • Narrator (English version): [beginning narration] A meadow in early morning, somewhere on Earth. Hidden here is a world as vast as our own, where the weeds are like impenetrable jungles, the stones are mountains, and even the smallest pond becomes an ocean. Time passes differently here: an hour is like a day, a day is like a season, and the passing of a season is a lifetime. But to observe this world, we must fall silent now, and listen to its murmurs.

  • Narrator (English version): [ending narration] The night gives way once more. Nothing will stop what's now in motion, what hides in shadow, what searches forward, what flutters toward the light. Here, where time is measured out in moments, and new lives emerge from darkness, a day begins like any other. Beyond anything we can imagine, and yet almost beneath our notice.

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