When I was a child, my impression of Pooh was a big butt that couldn't get out of it after eating too much honey, and the rabbit decorated it into a small table. When I was a child, my impression of Christopher Robin was that a wooden tail was nailed to the little donkey, and the child's name was very long. As a child, Winnie the Pooh was a cute but not delicate fairy tale, which vaguely challenged popular impressions in many places. For example, there is no fairy tale protagonist who doesn't work hard like Little Bear. Even a princess is at least responsible for Meimeimei, but the only thing that Little Bear can call a positive action is to bend over every morning. For example, there is no child in a fairy tale whose name is as long as Christopher Robin. Every time the bear calls his full name in a slow tone, he reminds us that this child is not the complete innocence we expected. On the contrary, he tried his best to Pretending to be an adult, so he solves all his friends' problems in ridiculous ways. That kind of faint negative feeling is incompatible with the either right or wrong that I learned when I was a child through compulsory education, striving for the top.
Now this film, Christopher Robin, from the opening introduction, which is not friendly to non-regular readers, has a multi-character dinner scene, to the narrative method of flowing water narrating children growing up, all of which are in line with mainstream movies to introduce the characters, lay out the story, and launch the first A climax routine doesn't fit.
Miraculously, it reproduces the spirit of Winnie the Pooh's story from form to essence.
Winnie the Pooh caters to, not the mainstream or beautiful, or witty, or ups and downs and misfortunes. Winnie the Pooh cares about children who are a little dull but naive. It's always slow, a little stupid (maybe stupid), very persistent (with honey), doesn't understand the consequences at all, and one can't help but be annoyed, but can't be mad at it. Because it is actually so sincere and full of love, it reflects the child in our deepest heart. It is a dazed laughing, crying and laughing, growing up and returning, and a reflection on the content of modern society.
It is not suitable to be deconstructed, it should be anti-deconstructed, a complete fairy tale of pure sadness, fun and regret.
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