I just finished watching it, and I want to find someone to theorize, who TM said is the love story of Beauty and the Beast!
During the Great Depression in the United States, a paranoid director wanted to make a shocking movie, and even coaxed a team to set sail to find the ideal shooting location. On the boat, the heroine "Ann" and the screenwriter "Jack" fell in love at first sight.
A group of people fell into "Skull Island" and fought fiercely with the natives and monsters on the island. The heroine "Ann" was kidnapped by the huge and terrifying chimpanzee "King Kong". Everyone tried their best to rescue her, not only to save her, but also to capture this wild big guy.
Back on Broadway, the director earned a lot of fame and money with it, but "King Kong" broke free during the performance and ran out of the theater to make a scene in New York City, irritably searching for Miss "Ann".
In the end, humans successfully killed it with advanced weapons. On the roof of the Empire State Building where "King Kong" just fell, "Ann" and "Jack", who have experienced hardships and dangers, hugged tightly.
I was moved by the bravery and selflessness of the men in the film, and the "heroic complex" runs through the entire film. In the case of the investor's opposition, the "director" firmly believed that he would succeed; Save each other by death; Jack knew he was going to die, but he also went to rescue his lover.
And "King Kong"'s fight against dinosaurs and humans in order to regain "An" is not bravery and love, but only possessiveness and the defense of its own territory.
If there is love in the film, it is Jack's feelings for Ann. He was tricked into getting on the boat and looking at the pier that was getting away, he said to the "director", "I have a lover". The director said, "No, you don't love her, otherwise why don't you jump into the sea and swim back". In the later episodes, he risked his life many times to save An, this should be love.
The rescue of men is not as simple as the word "selfless". Every decision seems to be death. I doubt it. N years ago, I read an article called "The Embodiment of Humanity in Camping". People help each other, but they will protect themselves first in danger, which is more reliable.
The scene is grand, the special effects are realistic, the picture is exquisite, and it has a very high appreciation value. Perhaps because of the lack of cinematic presence on the computer, it didn't get my tears.
Make a face at the crying people, quack!
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