let go

Graham 2022-04-22 07:01:02

I downloaded Toy Story 3 in August, and I have been struggling to prepare for the exam and have not watched it. On the plane when I flew back from Hong Kong in October, a middle-aged woman sat next to her, crying while watching the film, especially at the end of the film, she burst into tears. I was a little overwhelmed sitting next to me, not knowing whether to hand the tissue or not.

This is the charm of PIXER. I also cried when I watched this film, not because the film was sentimental, but PIXER always took the audience's pulse very accurately, and talked about the problems in life in a very subtle way, inadvertently let you have a kind of empathy experience, and the profound The proposition of the movie is put in the seemingly innocent cartoon and wants to make you laugh, who knows that it is tricked after watching it. It is telling the story of life. This story is not sad, pretentious, or impetuous. It is telling the simplest and simplest story in life, letting go. It is precisely because this story takes place in everyone's life that it seems so small, like a subtle emotion between a child and a toy, and yet so grand, it seems to be a discussion of life values ​​and themes.

PIXER is a team I have always admired. The stories they tell are different for adults than for children, but they appeal to almost everyone. When "Flying Home" was released, a friend went to the cinema and came back to tell me that there was an old couple with a grandson beside me who secretly wiped their tears. For the first five minutes, many people were sobbing. Pixer people tell stories very well. Subtle emotions are mixed with grand problems in life, like forming a huge fault, which makes you suddenly feel lost and think.

Toy Story 3 is one such story. After reading it, I can understand why the middle-aged woman on the plane is crying - as a person, a mother, a former child. The first layer of the film is about the values ​​of loyalty and pixer: the family is the final destination of all people, families r always there for you. This value is consistently and tirelessly reflected in movies such as "up", "Finding Nemo" and "Monsters, Inc.". The second layer of things should be learning to let go. Woody's love for Andy is simply maternal and inclusive. I once had the opportunity to go to the museum and have the opportunity to be admired by others forever, but Woody still chose that feeling instead of immortality. Although the meaning of preaching here is very strong, it still does not prevent us from understanding through Woody, no matter how deep the love is, There is no way to let go of the attachment, one day, you still have to accept the parting calmly. It's not that we don't love anymore, it's not that we don't have feelings, it's just that life can't be stuck on one point, everyone must move on. When Andy got to college, no matter how much he was attached to the toys, he had to find a way to say goodbye. No matter how much the toys love him, they also need to let him have the life he should have.

In fact, there is a scene in the movie that made me cry for a long time, the scene where the toys are holding hands and preparing to enter the incinerator calmly. This contrast is too strong. Pixer adds such a great sense of disillusionment to the toy, which makes me feel a little unacceptable intellectually, but emotionally touched. I think at that moment, the toys are really letting go. And it makes me feel that no one can beat the calmness of people in the face of great disasters and difficulties.

Maybe we should all wave goodbye to whoever said goodbye. This is not unrequited love, this kind of affection is complete. If you can't control what you call affectionate, it's just irrational. This movie reminds me of reading Harry Potter as a kid, over and over, hundreds of times, and the first original book was also HP. Then suddenly one day, HP ended (but Rowling seemed to be ready to write, I also think she must be restless), I lay on the bed, looking at the pile of old HP, I felt that something was suddenly cut off, abruptly Yes, as if a chunk of it just disappeared from my life. I started reading HP at the age of seven and read it until I was seventeen. The things that have grown up with me for ten years have just left.

Then one day, I inadvertently saw the HP topic in the tenth screening room, and a voice resembling Zhao Zhongxiang said disgustingly, when we were eleven years old, we did not wait for the admission letter from Owl. I started crying, thinking to myself, such a fucking disgusting voice made me cry in disgust. I didn't realize at the time that I said goodbye to my entire childhood and teenage years.

What grown-up hasn't felt lost watching Buzz Lightyear finally discovering that he's nothing more than a toy? Who didn't sigh when they saw the last sentence in Up (to the effect that life with you is the best adventure in life)? Pixer has taught us a lot. Over the past ten years, those creators have gradually formed families and entered another stage. They have been telling us the concept of family, the values ​​of life, and the problems that need deal in life.

If possible, I would like to design a Pixer Study course or an HP study course in college a year from now and tell people how much I like both of those things.

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Extended Reading

Toy Story 3 quotes

  • Dolly: Wow, cowboy. You just jump right in, don't you? I'm Dolly.

    Woody: [shakes her hand] Woody.

    Dolly: Woody? You're gonna stick with that? Well, now's the time to change it, you know, new room and all. That's coming from a doll named Dolly.

  • Andy: Molly! Stay out of my room!

    Molly: I wasn't in your room!

    Andy: Then who was messing with my stuff?