With the rising and rising of the corners of the mouth, there is a hissing in the throat~, oh~, ah? the sound of. With that look on my face, I watched the documentary. It was very interesting and showed me a completely different world. I'm actually a very annoying little bug person. The bad impression came from a movie I watched when I was a child. There was such a clip in the middle. When the boy was sleeping at night, he was bitten to death by an ant that crawled into his ear. So, from now on, I hated little bugs (ants, snails, etc.), but this documentary gave me a different feeling. The first feeling is fun. At the stage when the dung beetle pushes the dung ball, the fun is on full display. The dung beetle pushed the dung ball that was stuck on the ground with difficulty. Because the dung ball was stuck on the ground by a branch, the dung ball could not be pushed. But the dung beetle didn't know what was going on, and even overturned himself by pushing the ball. The second is the snail mating section. Two creeping snails are intertwined with each other, first touching each other tentatively, and then clinging to each other. Like two loving couples kissing. This section is also quite interesting. There is a very interesting comment on the Internet about this documentary: It took 20 years to shoot, cut into 70 minutes, and the actors are completely naked. Funny soul, it's funny to see everything, haha! The documentary is also very entertaining, changing the stereotype of the world of bugs in people's minds. Let people know about different bugs. Such as: two long beetles with their flaming red horns singled out, caterpillars lined up neatly to go to a meeting, and snails hugged affectionately. The zoomed-in lens allows us to see the serious and happy little animals. I hope I can be as serious and happy about my future life as they are.
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