The love for chocolate is intermittent, ranging from half a year to two years. When I don't want to eat, I don't want to eat a piece. When I want to eat, I buy a bunch to take home. Crispy basmati rice, Meiji (various!), Fujiya, Dove Nuts, Hershey, or Dutch Belgian, to name a few.
There's no denying that chocolate is a warm mood-lifter (but watch out for your weight, ahem). This impression may have been set by the hot chocolate drink in foreign novels and movies as early as childhood when there was no money to buy a large piece of chocolate.
My favorite kind of chocolate from the Meiji family, 2 small pieces of each, about 5 or 6 kinds in a box, very beautiful and delicious. I think it's the one that stimulates the desires of children the most, both in terms of aroma and appearance. While watching this movie, I couldn't help but go to the refrigerator to get two pieces to eat. Nestled in the swivel chair, squinting to watch the movie and savoring the sweetness in my mouth, a simple sense of happiness rippled slightly.
And this movie, like the chocolate in the hand, is colorful and tastes different.
Overall, very sweet. Even the punishment and the mystery are not particularly scary. Colorful fairy tale dreams, sci-fi-like high-tech scenes (why does the elevator remind me of "The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy"...)... I understand the truth, I understand the plot. Simple and clear but not simple acting. Of course, I admit that I went there for Johnny Depp in the beginning... well, it is indeed a movie suitable for adults and children to watch together.
(Don't think green caterpillars are disgusting, Depp's laughing crazy, squirrels are violent, garbage dumps are filthy, our little ones actually love these - don't believe you can experiment with them - I'm sure they have a lot of fun with "golden" Rose-colored little toes - bouncing, bouncing!" No interest...)
Except for the clearest truth, "good kids will be rewarded bad kids will be punished for being greedy and selfish. , this movie also reminded me of something else. That's right
, it's Forrest Gump's famous saying,
"Life is like chocolate, you never know what the next one will taste like."
Little Charlie isn't particularly smart or brilliant, his family is so poor that he can't even buy a bar of chocolate; his dad is unemployed in the first half of the film; his house is crumbling and always snowed in...
but the film In the end, little Charlie got the factory, and Dad got a better job. The house is still crumbling, but it has moved parallel to the fairy tale dream of the factory...
Well, it's still a very clear turnaround.
There is hope in life as long as there is no despair.
There's nothing wrong with letting the kids know and remember this.
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