When it comes to Africa, the first thing that comes to mind is the vast expanse of the Sahara Desert. What can't be compared with the text description is that the visual impact of the film, the cut of the lens and the perfect combination of light and shadow, are difficult to describe by light. What is particularly commendable is that, as an excellent documentary, its soundtrack is constantly changing its style with the needs of filming. At the time when filming the Meerkats Luring Capuchin, the soundtrack changed to a joyous tone with a tense and anxious atmosphere, especially when combined with the old man’s cheerful sentence "thank you very much", which made it uncontrollable.
The survival of the fittest, whether in nature or in human society, all expound the same truth. The crickets that released the stinky liquid because they wanted to prey on the young birds and finally failed to be divided by the same species, the giraffes that killed each other to fight for water to survive, the African leopards that failed to prey on the prey captured by their mothers...and so on. ...The vastness of the world, one flower, one world, everything is renewing all the time, Baiyun Canggu, each chasing his own destiny. Perhaps this is the truest and most direct secret revealed to us by nature.
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