I give five points, come and burn me

Dane 2022-01-14 08:01:08

I simply read a few film reviews, the score is not high, I give five points. After reading it, it is still very shocking. It is a reflection on the prosperous modern technology. Good things always have their opposites. When we accept new technology, will there be negative things? We are sinking into the prosperous wave of new technology, and many people are lost, lost in the false happiness that technology brings us. In fact, at any age, people are still people with seven emotions and six desires. When we seek happiness, it is also accompanied by pain and troubles. The government in the film went to the other extreme, attempting to castrate human desires, making people a walking dead. The so-called fire department has also become an arson team. The captain of the arson team is a wise man, but he is destroying knowledge, his personality is divided and he hates knowledge. Although the adopted protagonist does not have much knowledge, he becomes addicted as soon as he comes into contact with paper books. There is a spirit of resistance, curiosity and heroism in his genes. If you are not satisfied with what I said, you can come to burn me or get me a blood bun for me to eat.

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Extended Reading
  • Cindy 2022-03-25 09:01:17

    Burning books and pit Confucians in the future world...

  • Jaqueline 2022-03-24 09:03:06

    Really bully people who read less. If it wasn't for a bread machine, this film wouldn't come in at all. It can be seen that the setting is OK, but the director's storytelling ability is too poor.

Fahrenheit 451 quotes

  • Clarisse McClellan: Why do I always make you nervous?

    Guy Montag: You don't.

    Clarisse McClellan: When I see you burning up Eel's lives, you don't look nervous.

    Guy Montag: That's because I'm very good at my job.

    Clarisse McClellan: Hmm. Have you ever thought, even for one second, why you do what you do? You should try reading before burning.

  • Captain Beatty: Do you want to know what's inside all these books? Insanity. The Eels want to measure their place in the universe, so they turn to these novels about non-existent people. Or worse, philosophers. Look, here's Spinoza. One expert screaming down another expert's throat. "We have free will. No, all of our actions are predetermined." Each one says the opposite, and a man comes away lost, feeling more bestial and lonely than before. Now, if you don't want a person unhappy, you don't give them two sides of a question to worry about.

    Guy Montag: Just give 'em one.

    Captain Beatty: Better yet, none.