I went to watch "Flying Life 2" at night, and I didn't watch 1, but it didn't have much impact, and I received the main plot smoothly: the first was that he found his lead seal in the second part, and the second was that he formed a team, participated in the Bayingbrook race, and won the championship. Settle regrets and get fulfillment.
Racing is a very burning sport, a sport that kills.
The protagonist Zhang Chi is a failed athlete, a man who has been knocked down, a physical condition that has stepped on the lake, a hopeless career, and a job that is free from hard work.
I simply have a group of good friends, a period of passionate struggle. Although it is also a regrettable memory, a shadow and fear.
Dreams and reality are always opposites, and miracles don't necessarily happen if you hold on. Of course, this is the movie, and a miracle happens.
The words of the protagonist are resounding:
It's not in the past, it's me who accepts it.
I admit the rules, I follow the rules, but it's fair!
I can do without grades, but I want to be innocent.
I need to know my record, my grades are not clean.
59 minutes and 58 seconds.
59 minutes and 57 seconds.
An impressive scene:
The best way to overcome fear is to face it, and as a result, the protagonist kicks the gas pedal and rolls over. The protagonist broke down and cried on the spot, which was really distressing for him and funny. There is a football player wearing the national flag and retiring honorably, think about yourself: the most regrettable thing in life, the twilight of the hero, and the white head of the beauty.
The glorious years did not end perfectly, and his life was like a matchlight, wiping the ground and extinguishing it.
The last stage of hail, the racetrack, the opponent who deliberately played tricks, the car with little performance, and the crisis of exploding at any time.
He's burning, he's gambling with his life.
The moment you cross the finish line, the world is silent. He did it.
The laughter is dense, and it's not the kind of laughing that is-pee-fart. Although the character is somewhat pathetic, it has a perfect ending, and this one, he earned his face back.
It's a bit of a fairy tale dream, the ending is complete, and I personally think there is no follow-up, and this character has come to an end.
The movie talks about human nature and rules and the like, which doesn't particularly touch me, because it can't be related to my own life. It should be that my experience is relatively shallow, my understanding is not deep enough, and I always feel that my head is empty when I write.
Just one point: I feel that in terms of character building, Manager Zhang's experience may be more complicated, and he has been eroded by reality.
The part that sings in the movie: "Glorious Years" only leaves a remnant of the shell today. The protagonist thinks that he is still the original Manager Zhang, the one who has a passion to help him, the one who struggles side by side. But the reality is that Manager Zhang can't sing this song in the face of him. A dragon slayer boy eventually becomes an evil dragon? The metaphor may not be appropriate, but that's pretty much it.