Although it is so interesting, it is really not suitable for watching with children. It looked embarrassing and confusing. This is just a story of a woman's political correctness and a rogue rabbit who avenged her parents but worked hard to become a matchmaker. It is a perfect combination of a bear child and a moral model. The heroine is not an animal protectionist either. When the rabbits stole the old man's vegetable garden, Bey thought that the land originally belonged to the animals. There was nothing wrong with that, but the fruits of anyone's labor should be respected, not unreasonable favoritism. This encouragement and arrogance led to two subsequent murders by the bears and rabbits (Blackberry, Electric Shock). After McGregor's uncle and nephew died and passed out, the rabbits cheered, and the disregard for life left me in a cold sweat. Adults can distinguish right from wrong, but children can't! ! Maybe it's my instinct to substitute the rabbit as a child, even considering the deadly relationship between the rabbit and the old McGregor, it is still very uncomfortable. So does the heroine really love rabbits? It seems yes, but in fact it is not. The heroine's slump in painting makes her want to find a sustenance to support herself. You can see the instant rage when painting. Rabbits are just a template for her paintings, so her behavior tends towards rabbits, and when that tendency conflicts with her needs, the choice is obvious. Asking old McGregor to let the rabbits eat vegetables is very rude, girl; even if he knows who owns the vegetable garden and the house, he still asks McGregor to open the vegetable garden to the rabbits, ignoring the damage to the vegetable garden. It doesn't hurt to sell the cub, will you allow the child to eat and spit on the food? Several times, the imperative style of asking wheat Gregor to like rabbits unconditionally can only make it more obvious that she does not really like rabbits. Friendship is a need, and the heroine is only a need for paintings. The plot twist is when the rabbit blows up his home. In fairy tales, even a bear child's awakening does not need to bear any serious consequences, but in reality any bear child's similar behavior is a catastrophic consequence. Who can accept that their child learns an important lesson in life in this way? things in fairy tale are lies…
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