First, Muska frantically searched for the core, wandering around in the jungle, and finally found the black stone monument, and then greedily groped for the text with both hands while shaking, and finally excited. Said: "I can read the text on this!" The
second is the line that Muska said after he crashed the flying ship: "Hahaha, behold, people are like garbage." The
third is after Muska's eyes were injured. He groped for a way out like crying, and finally disappeared with the collapse of Laputa.
Many people may simply regard Colonel Muska as a vice, but in fact, there seems to be another focus of Hayao Miyazaki in it. Muska is by no means a simple bad guy. Through the above three scenes, I can almost infer the life experience of Muska.
First of all, the Muska family knows their identity. This must have planted unforgettable seeds in the heart of the young Muska. There is reason to believe that the innocent Muska at the time had the same longing as Buss in his heart, and wanted to see the surpassing home that flew in the sky. But the Sky City is inaccessible to mortals. The Muska clan who gave up the Sky City cannot return to the castle on their own. And the flying stone, which is the proof of the royal family, is also not in his family.
It can be seen that the Muska family may be a declining royal family who has been deprived of the right to inherit the throne, and Muska may have been instilled in the "elite education" on how to regain the throne when he was a child. From this moment on, his heart may not have become crazy, but it has begun to twist. The simple imagination of the city in the sky in childhood has become a desire to win the city in the sky. This is the end of childhood, and also the growth and fall of human beings.
After Muska grew up, he found that the world would not be so smooth sailing. To return to the city in the sky, there is probably no other way except to use the power of the power on the ground. So he joined the army and tried his best to climb up, but the Sky City was always like a ridiculed legend, and he couldn't get the interest of the upper hand. I am afraid that Muska’s age is no longer young. For a long time, even he himself may have begun to doubt whether the family legend is just a rumor-it was not until the robot fell from the sky that Muska did not. Finally convinced the superior to investigate the existence of the Sky City.
I think it must be very difficult for Muska to climb up. Muska should be a smart man, but corrupt and incompetent high-ranking officials abound in the army (such as the fat general who can only take treasures). Before Muska becomes a colonel, he should give in to many such corrupt people. Live it. He was educated by the elite since he was a child, knowing that he is a royal family in the sky, and Muska, who has a high self-esteem, had to live in the mud on the ground. Such humiliation made his heart repeatedly twisted. From the last attack on the ground, and in the words "people are like rubbish", he can hear a kind of revenge and exasperation. When those who he regarded as rubbish were dominating his head, his original dream-to recapture the city in the sky-had become a pure desire-"the pursuit of powerful power." Let yourself one day dominate the world and dominate these stupid mortals.
Muska is actually a very poor person. Judging from the play, he is probably not married, childless, indifferent to family relations, and has no real friends. He may not even have real dreams. The dream he has always insisted on-regaining the city in the sky-is probably a burden imposed on him by people in the family, and this dream, before seeing the black stone monument at the core, I am afraid that even he himself is half-believing. So when he saw that the plants had completely covered the core area, Muska's heart must be shaken. In the end, when I saw the flying stone in the center and the console stone on the side, Muska almost jumped on it. He leaned back, almost put his nose on the tablet to sniff the words, and when he was shaking and fumbling while comparing his notebook, I actually felt a bit bitter--this was a moment of relief for a person who was burdened with pain. Although his dream has come true, he is no longer who he was at that time. The young Muska, who had (maybe) a simple fantasy at the time, has become a soldier whose heart is filled with hatred and desire.
In all fairness, Muska was very polite to Xita. He didn't say that he would cut the roots after achieving the goal, perhaps out of mercy to his fellow tribe. However, his ambition was only realized for a moment, and then he was ruined by two little ghosts who didn't even grow their hair. The strong light from the flying stone blinded his eyes, and the fruit of his hand collapsed like this. At the last moment, Muska's eyes were dark, and his voice was whimpering. At that time, what was he thinking about in his collapsed heart?
……
I have a hobby, that is, I like to imagine the if route. If Buss is in Muska's position, I am afraid Buss will become the same as him. A person’s personality is determined by the environment. A bad personality will only be generated in ugly soil. If Muska met half the personality of a miner when he was growing up in the army, maybe he won’t be crazy in the end. NS. Or if his mother has the same mindset as the pirate mother, maybe Muska can become a man?
That's the end of Muska's story. I have to admire Hayao Miyazaki's ability to shape characters. Just a few scenes can make a villain show a certain depth. Well, in the end, I just hope that in the future story, when Buss and Xi Da meet the pressure of life, they don't regret that they abandoned the flying stone back then, and don't long for the castle flying on the clouds to solve all the difficulties in the world.
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