The film can completely exclude the second part, from the first lightning rookie to the third abdicated logistics team leader. Racing on the track back then, the King, Roadhog, and the then-rookie Lightning. In the third installment, Roadhog acts as the narrator and the king takes a backseat. Only McQueen was on the track, competing with cars of his generation. Even the rust-removing spirit, who was initially disdainful of McQueen's endorsement, became his biggest supporter, from stunned to calm. He is now just like the previous Roadhog, the king, making way for newcomers, just like in the movie Carr said to McQueen, he asked his uncle (when will he retire), his uncle answered him, and the junior would tell him. Just like the famous Dr. Lantian back then, he couldn't escape the changes of the times.
The theme of the film is McQueen's retirement. What I didn't talk about was the handover between McQueen and Sister Cool at the end. Throughout the film, McQueen never thought of retiring, and he also worked hard to win the championship again. But at the end, he also understood that the newcomer should be allowed to gallop, and he became the logistics team leader, just like Dr. Lantian trained him at that time. (Suddenly remembered a Hong Kong movie, Xu Guanwen and Stephen Chow grabbed a chicken feather head, I think it is also a hint of the handover of the old and the new.) McQueen stayed on the field in another form. But in the end I have a little doubt, the cool sister is a woman. Women's racing and men's racing are unfair from an objective point of view. But isn't the movie a bit feminist?
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