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Reflections on Moonlight Box or Journey to the West

Stephen Chow's classic film A Chinese Odyssey is endowed with too many ideological connotations and even philosophical significance, and Crane is one of these fans. Once upon a time, cranes could watch this movie from beginning to end, but they couldn't laugh at all. Because the crane is not only attracted by the plot and characters in the play, but also inexplicably gives birth to a kind of sympathy.

The most unforgettable scene is that at the end of this scene, Xia Zi, a fairy, floated up and flew relentlessly to the sun. Supreme Bao pulled Xia Zi, but because of his passion, the gold hoop became tighter and tighter. Under the pain, my hand gradually loosened. Xia Zi went like this.

Every time I come here, the crane looks at the red TV screen full of sunshine and listens to sad and helpless music, feeling gloomy. I always thought it was a sad and helpless move to let go of the supreme treasure, but isn't this a compromise in the face of strong oppression?

At that time, cranes thought that destiny was inviolable. Everyone has the most helpless time. Society and the world have their own powerful forces, and individuals can only yield to them. Although you know that you will lose a lot of things if you give in, it is a lot of things that you once thought you would firmly defend. When you make these concessions, you will comfort yourself from the depths of your soul, and you will feel that what you have done is taken for granted, and even Jesus Christ, the God in heaven, will forgive you.

However, the undeniable fact is that you can't avoid your own weaknesses. In the philosophical analysis of A Chinese Odyssey, the important task of learning from the West is often interpreted as the career and success of adults when they grow up or the pressure of social dogma. All this is considered irresistible and ubiquitous by many people. Therefore, they make a person who has ideals and morality have no ideals, and even a few people have lost their morality. Idealism belongs to children.

& gt "That man looks strange."

& gt "I saw it, too. He looks like a dog. "

& gt You remember the last sentence of a Chinese Odyssey. In fact, this sentence is the theme of the whole movie. To put it another way, I call it: the helplessness of men.