throw it up for a souvenir
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To be honest, Pixar did a really bad job this time; but to give it a score, I can't help but give 5 stars.
I remember when I was in elementary school, when there was no Youku, no potatoes, no popular and no fast broadcast, my dad bought me all kinds of animated movies from time to time. Whether it's genuine or pirated, all I can remember from my elementary school holidays are animation movies on various VCDs and DVDs. Most of them I just read once and put them on the bookshelf to collect dust. A few survived and put them on the TV to watch several times a year. One of them is Monster Power Company. How much can you see? This year, Uniqlo released the clothes of the Monster University series. My mother pointed at the clothes and said, "Don't you buy one of the hair monsters?" As a female man in my twenties, I cried like a fool, and at the end I could burst into laughter. This was the charm of Pixar in the past. Even when I chatted with my American friends about Monster University's upcoming release, I had a feeling of tears in my fellow villagers seeing my fellow villagers. Pulled too far.
Unfortunately, I didn't see the prequel of this masterpiece in my mind on the big screen. I missed the release in the United States and China. I could only squat on a chair that was not very comfortable and read the so-called chicken feet. The high-definition Chinese character version of . Although I love Monster Power to the death, I have to say that this time Pixar's Monster University broke my heart into scum that fell to the ground and was swept away by the on-duty students and couldn't be picked up again. I don't want to read the inspirational stories of Diaosi's counterattack and the return of the rich and handsome prodigal son. I just want to see the gentle fur monster and the somewhat annoying big-eyed boy in my memory. I think the original intention of Pixar in making this film is the same as the original intention of making Toy Story 3: the children who watched these films were more or less the age of college students, and old wine in new bottles will always make people reminisce about the past The time, regardless of whether the wind is good or not, will go to see. It feels like Pixar is also saying, "Look, as long as you grow up, I still remember you."
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