Movies every adult should watch because the price of growing up is the loss of human nature

Brady 2022-04-20 09:02:45

Watching such a film full of innocence and warmth on such a sunny morning is double the joy.

Filmed in the Alps, the scenery is amazing.

Heidi has a bright smile that shows front teeth when she smiles, as well as thick brown curly hair like algae, big clear eyes, and looks somewhere between a boy and a girl. She likes to run barefoot on the grass, sleep on haystacks, hug Grandpa, Grandma and two goats named Little Swan and Little Bear.

However, her aunt thought that a good education, splendid clothes, and a noble life were gifts to her, and sold her to Miss Clara's house as a companion.

The urban forest constructed of reinforced concrete is full of rules and strict levels. Once you do not meet the requirements of the upper class you will be considered an outlier.

When Heidi woke up, she couldn't see the blue sky and white clouds, the eagles soaring, the fragrance of the earth and grass, and the soft grass with her feet. She misses the Alps so much that she suffers from sleepwalking. Fortunately she was eventually sent back.

Heidi can live a "primitive" life without shoes and knives and forks again, just missing her good friend Miss Clara a little. After receiving a letter from Heidi to her, Clara went to Heidi, and finally began to walk again under the healing of nature.

Although it is a fairy tale movie, it made me see in Heidi the simple happiness that we have forgotten: laugh when happy, cry when sad, eat when hungry, sleep when tired. We always want more from the outside world to satisfy our desires, not knowing that we are already rich. It's like Heidi said to her grandpa when she saw her grandma who couldn't eat hard bread: "We're so lucky!"

There is a saying in the Buddha Dharma: "When the self-nature is born, it is self-sufficient." A newborn baby is born with a smile, and everything is perfect. It is a pity that such a period of human beings is too short.

A movie is always a movie, and after watching it, you still have to continue the life of a chicken feather. It's just that a child like Heidi is the best reminder: we used to be joyful children, but growing up makes us gradually forget the joy of being a child!

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