One of my favorites is Voyage. At this time, King Caspian had put down the rebellion, and the people lived and worked in peace, so Caspian assembled his crew and set off toward the end of the world to explore the inaccessible mysterious sea, and the most distant place of the Creator's kingdom. The whole story is like the title of a book, shrouded in the light of the golden morning sun, and it is so light that it is indescribable.
However, when I first read this book, I was worried that if the story was adapted into a movie, it would be a thankless effort. First, the adventure story is too loose and casual. Unlike the first two books, there is a clear main plot to defeat a big villain at the beginning; second, the description of the end of the world in the book is too beautiful, I can’t imagine How can the movie be made so as not to ruin the original. For example, the sea covered by white lilies, when reading a book, feels beautiful like a fairyland like heaven, and if you are moved, you shed tears. This set is really made in the movie, and the fake flowers are floating on the water.
To be honest, the shock I received when I was studying may be incomparable to any concrete picture.
In my current experience, there is only one thing that can relate to this-I went to watch the Hubble Telescope documentary a while ago, and when I couldn't help but shed tears in front of the vast starry sky, I once again remembered the expedition in Narnia. How I felt when I came to the end of the world:
"Everyone on board was filled with joy and excitement, but not an excitement that made one talk. The further they sailed the less they spoke, and then almost in a whisper. The stillness of that last sea laid hold on them."
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