For example, the rock school that made me stick to 12 o'clock yesterday.
Panda Black's body language is still the same, and the plot can be considered cliché. Counting American movies, there are countless inspirational films where a group of repressed people challenge themselves under the leadership of an unorthodox sociopath, and almost all votes are successful. Look at the Dead Poets Society, the nuns are crazy too. . . .
So, in fact, what they attract us may not be the content at all, but the desire to overthrow the dull memory.
That desire for dissatisfaction with our own lives that we can never defeat in reality.
Yes, we were always learning when we were young, and we were told what we couldn’t do and what we could do; we
didn’t realize until we were adults that puppy love is the sweetest thing in life, and the cassettes that teachers called garbage are all classics, those handwritten manuscripts. There are far fewer sick sentences than Lu Xun's, but countless people have no chance to correct these mistakes;
even as adults, they are still living in countless traps, being employed, being harmonious, and being abused. . . .
Therefore, we had to watch the protagonists in the inspirational film, under the leadership of spiritual mentors who will not appear in our lives, break through our own destiny,
we watched them with tears and smiles to defeat all the bosses and put the heavy reality Break through;
for we have no chance.
So I like this movie. I am not a rock fan, but I like the spirit of rock and roll. Before the fall of rock and roll, those ancestors really had the fearlessness to fight against everything and overthrow everything, and the songs were really nice.
I used to want to be a drummer.
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