The first thing I saw was stills, and it felt familiar. A fantasy, warm fairy tale world, reminds me of "The Little Prince". Later, it was known that it was adapted from the children's picture book of the same name published in 1963 by American illustrator Maurice Sendak, known as Picasso in the fairy tale world. I feel regretful that compared to the 40-page picture book, this 100-minute video is tedious and cumbersome. Although it gave the expression and emotion of the beast, it also deliberately added a lot of the director's own understanding and imagination. The effect is undoubtedly devastating. Just imagine, with Mona Lisa as the protagonist, write a lingering love scene, arrange it into a movie for the public to appreciate, and let the public observe the "real" Mona Lisa's smile. . . Such a devastating effect. Question, is it interesting? ?
Beautiful drawing pages have given us enough. Closing his eyes, the pure and warm picture appeared in his mind. . . The lonely and sad little boy, the huge monster, looked at him with gentle and quiet eyes. They walked together on the silent wasteland, sharing simple joys and sorrows.
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Where the Wild Things Are reviews