I'm actually quite picky about movies, but I don't remember how many people I've recommended this to. On the one hand, I don’t like commercial films that spend a lot of money and pile up various special effects so that the audience doesn’t know the so-called “high” commercial films that disappear after a hit. Interest. So "Iron Fist" hit my appetite.
Beauty, handsome man, robot. Future, sci-fi, father-son relationship. Violent, oily, and bloody. Whatever you love, this movie is worth watching. Not to mention the plot, in action sci-fi movies, it is absolutely excellent; not to mention the effect, I watched IMAX, and the adrenaline was absolutely surging. I just want to record a small detail that I felt a little bit while watching the movie.
Wolverine is keen to buy one new robot after another, gamble on it, get beaten to a pulp and get caught in the next cycle. He didn't think about where the end was, but indulged in an inexplicable frenzy. In life, I used to feel that I screwed up one job and then changed it to another, instead of trying to do my current job well, I just fell into such a cycle after another, taking myself again and again Betting on your life, and constantly telling yourself that failure is only due to wrong choices or objective reasons of one kind or another, and in the end, nothing will happen.
In the movie, Max, the son of Wolverine who is unwilling to admit, found a training machine from the robot dump, a training machine that has been eliminated for several generations, but he loves it, and because the training machine is used for beatings, so Relying on Wolverine's actions in some underground arenas also made a little reputation. At this time, Wolverine began to think about selling the robot again, because he didn't think it had much potential, but he gave up the idea at Max's insistence. If Wolverine's robot can win the championship, it can only be luck; and Max's robot can win, it is inevitable.
If we keep screwing up the previous job and expecting success in the next job, it is basically delusional; and if we take the current job seriously, even if it is unknown now, future success is already waiting not far away. Have screwed up a lot, missed a lot, but not in the future.
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