Horrifying to think about, Simon Pegg's "The World's End" gave me chills with its darkly humorous British comedy. As the finale of the "Blood and Ice Cream" trilogy (aka "Three Lovely" trilogy), the film combines "Zombie Shaun" and "Blood Detective" with grandiose and deep, messy and well-organized, witty and melancholy The Edgar Wright style is consistent, but like "To Youth" and "Charlotte Trouble", it "starts a sea of gulls and herons" in the depths of our fragile souls: another in Simon Pegg's antithetical trilogy. The image of sitting upright in the two films vividly portrays a "Sanqingzi" in Beijing dialect and "Yansan" in Shanghai dialect, who is open-mouthed and bohemian, and he aligns his childhood playmates to return to the road of youth ( In fact, it is the road to drunkenness in the tavern.) It can be said that the encounter is full of laughter and climaxes, but the faint sadness is always so intriguing: Looking at life, the wild and frivolous narcissism in youth is not terrible. Years honed their respective edges and corners will always smooth; mid-life crisis can be ignored, after all, it has existed in ancient times and is common today. The most terrifying thing is that when we become what others want us to be, what we lose is the most authentic thing as a person - as Eason Chan sang in "A strange", "We work hard to live. To be wonderful; to look and live wonderfully; we are free and choose the future; we choose, choose not to be a monster." We have truly lost ourselves and our nature of advocating freedom, and everything is only for Make others look better, as Simon Pegg's fat sidekick says in this film: "We just look good", and as Gray says "I thought I had changed, but this town has changed "It's more than that small town? In fact, the world has changed a long time ago. It has become unrecognizable, ferocious, and terrifying. It has become nowhere for the idle cloud and wild cranes like Gray and Aguai, and it has become a blue-blooded blank person for everyone on the road. , to look better and brighter! till the end of the world!
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The World's End reviews