Buck's path to self-recovery, the rhythm arrangement of the whole story is reasonable, and the director is experienced, so there is nothing wrong with the rules of this movie. The growing protagonist has experienced three masters. The first master pets Buck but hopes that Buck will obey him, and he is not good at seeing Buck's value.
The second master took Buck as a companion and gave him encouragement and support. Buck was also a character transition that took place in the second master, but it was nothing more than that.
The third owner met Buck on the way of reflection. One person and one dog didn’t communicate much, but they all seemed to know what each other needed, so the third owner took Buck back to his "home" and helped him find his nature. And Buck also helped the third master realize what the adventure he had been looking for when he came here.
Originally, if I only watched the first half an hour of the whole article, I thought that the adventure of a dog could be over, but after reading it, I think it may not be a dog. After all, most people only live to the first half, and there is no way to find the nature like Buck. In the same way, people find themselves to live.
Some commented that Buck looks too human, so he looks very different. This reminds me of an acting video about the actor's eyes I watched two days ago. I think Buck can’t speak, his body language is limited, and he doesn’t have much narration. There should be only eyes that can express one's thoughts. Unlike "A Dog's Mission", "A Dog's Mission" is a real dog. Dogs can't make eye contact as required, so there are a lot of finishing touches. It’s easy to think of dog owners who often fantasize about communicating with themselves and cooperating with the dog’s behavior, so if you want to make breakthroughs and upgrades, you will inevitably suffer losses.
I hit 4.5 at the end of the movie. Why? Because the old man died in the end, maybe the perfect life has to die before it can be realized after thinking about it. It must be a little regrettable, and the score must be a little regrettable. Fight for favor [doge])
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