Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Tourist attractions - Why did Blackbeard ask Wayne to have a child? I was so shocked that I couldn’t stand it anymore.

Why did Blackbeard ask Wayne to have a child? I was so shocked that I couldn’t stand it anymore.

Why do we fall? Last year, my mother and I were on vacation in Australia and came to Brisbane. Of course, one of the reasons for coming here is to experience a resort that stretches for 44 miles and consists of 35 beautiful beaches, which is the world-famous Queensland Gold Coast.

The Gold Coast has sunshine all year round and the air is moist. The natural and clean white sand beach and the boundless blue ocean are connected by silvery waves like broken flowers, and everything about this marvelous workmanship is even more colorful and magical when embellished with the lush subtropical palm forest behind it.

Due to the development of local tourism, you can see people from different countries and regions around the world gathering together. You can play volleyball on the beach, sunbathe, or just lie under the parasol to kill time. What I chose was to lie on the beach with my upper body covered, feeling the dazzling sun of the southern hemisphere while passing the time and wasting away my time.

At this time, my mother's words "What a cute child" attracted my lazy eyes. A two- or three-year-old white girl was staggering towards our direction, wearing only a pair of loose blue denim suspenders. When she walked, her two lotus arms spread out her teeth and claws, her two calves were swaying, and her staggering look was very cute. Her parents were walking leisurely more than twenty meters behind her. Suddenly, the child stumbled and accidentally fell on the beach. Although the beach is soft, it is still a fall after all. I saw the little girl raising her head and turning to her parents, her little mouth holding sand in her mouth grinning, her big blue eyes moistening, and she looked like she was about to cry. At this moment, I felt a pang in my heart and really wanted to step forward and help her. But I was surprised to notice a subtle move by her parents - they were startled for a moment, but immediately seemed indifferent, and then simply stopped and started talking on the spot. When the little girl saw that there was no adult to help her, she had no choice but to stand up on her own. However, her face turned cloudy and clear. She ran straight to me, smiled and stretched out her fleshy little hand to touch my glasses.

At this moment, her parents also came over. During the conversation, I learned that their family of three flew from New York, USA, to Australia for vacation. When asked what they did after seeing their child fall, the two smiled knowingly. The little girl's father shrugged and said to me, you know what? Why do you fall? Because only by falling can you learn how to get up.

At that moment, I understood why some people say that Chinese children are raised by hugging, while American children are raised by crawling. This statement is not an exaggeration at all.

On the streets in the United States, it is rare to see adults holding children in their arms, because they all advocate that children should learn to walk as early as possible. If a toddler accidentally falls, parents generally will not run forward and bend down to help the child up unless the fall causes a bloody head. On the contrary, the parents will wait there silently, and the children will gradually get used to it, get up quietly, and continue on their way.

Children are like this, why don’t we adults not fall and fall?

Each of us may be in adversity, but what we need first is not the help of others. But the courage to get up on the spot. As Teacher Yu said, we must learn to stand upright on the ruins of loneliness, failure and humiliation, and learn to regard setbacks and adversity as an experience, a kind of wealth, and a special motivation for ourselves.

People can fail, but they can’t fail to grow. Falling down can help us grow and mature faster. Then I would rather give myself more courage to wrestle...

Why do we fall?

In the first part of the trilogy, when little Bruce fell into the bat for the first time Dong, this is how his father comforted his young and fearful child. When the Wayne family mansion was burned down because of Batman himself, the butler once again encouraged the frustrated Bruce. This sentence is not only the encouragement and comfort of relatives, but also the keynote of the entire film and the entire series of films!

In each film, he will fall countless times and then learn countless times. stand up. Looking beyond a single movie, from the perspective of the trilogy, the first part is the growth history of his birth, the second part is where he becomes the Dark Knight, takes the blame, his loved one dies, is abandoned and misunderstood as a public enemy, etc., these are all fall. The third part depicts the process of him standing up in detail.

At the beginning of the third part, his legs cannot stand, his beard is slovenly, and he lives in seclusion. This is actually to express his external state of falling. From his conversation and thoughts, we can see his thoughts. He also fell. This also explains why the third part is called "The Dark Knight Rises."

As a superhero who grew up from a mortal, Batman, who does not have any superpowers, is completely different from the fairy aliens such as Superman and Green Lantern. His growth and his humanity are his biggest characteristics: From a cynical and timid boy who tried to integrate into the criminal world in order to understand the psychology of criminals, he fell in the darkness and rose from the darkness to become a hero. As a mortal, he will also have moments of selfishness, confusion and failure. Whenever this happens, he will ask the butler who always stands behind him with hope in his eyes, "You haven't given up on me yet, have you? You still haven' t give up on me?".

The lovely old man would always say "NEER! (never)" to him with a loving smile. Whether it was supporting him in pretending to have fun at the beginning, burning the last letter that Batman's beloved sent him, or opposing his comeback in the end, he was always thinking from the perspective of wanting Bruce to be happy.

Batman and the Girls: Rachel, the childhood sweetheart, is a very important character setting. From the beginning to the end of the film, it is Bruce's wishful thinking towards Rachel. When Bruce tried to avenge his father's murderer, Rachel had no intention of enlightening him at all. Instead, she didn't understand why he couldn't forget the past and gave Bruce a cruel blow. He slapped him and said some nonsense about how your father would be ashamed of you, about the difference between justice and revenge, and about asking Bruce to forget about smiling in the past (it was exactly what Robin said to Bruce: They have begun to sympathize with you. It won't take a few days to blame you, why haven't you forgotten the past? You have to practice pretending to smile in front of the mirror (Robin's speaking out of Bruce's heart is in sharp contrast to Rachel's incomprehension); while Bruce is practicing outside. When Rachel returned after seven years, she did not show any ecstasy and had no interest in where Bruce had gone. She also thought he was a playful and ridiculous playboy. Bruce tried to express his feelings but was completely denied by the other party: You I'm not interested in the inner world. In the first meeting between Little Robin and Bruce in the third part, he said, "People will show sympathy for your experience at the beginning, but after a year or two, people will blame you: Why don't you forget the past, why don't you Happy. So we have to disguise ourselves and smile in the mirror." This further explains why little Robin can know Batman's true identity from Bruce's eyes and expression, and Batman saved him in the first film. So many times, Rachel couldn't recognize that it was her childhood sweetheart - only people with similar painful experiences can truly understand each other's pain and understand each other's actions. Even his childhood sweetheart couldn't understand what he did, let alone other people, so it was natural for Bruce to be attracted to Thalia, who seemed to understand him very well. Rachel's slap was so sad!

Although Rachel kissed Bruce at the end of the first part, it also showed that the man she loved deeply did not come back. She liked the Bruce of the past, not Batman or the one wearing the dude mask now. Bruce even thinks that the current Bruce is the mask of Batman (in fact, she did not show any love to the Bruce in the past, but more scolded him for not forgetting the past). In the second film, Rachel did not choose Batman and wanted to marry Harvey Dent. It can be seen that Rachel actually does not love Batman at all. As mentioned before, she understands what he does as a childhood sweetheart. Not as good as Robin. This character is actually the fetters of Batman's growth. If Batman wants to truly rise, he must cross the barrier of Rachel.

Why Bruce easily fell in love with the female villain in the third part is not because Bruce has become frivolous. There are three reasons: First, the appearance and temperament of the female villain are actually the same as Rachel, Batman's true love. very similar. Second, she and Bruce are kindred spirits in a way (saving the world, although for her saving the world means destroying it and resurrecting it). Third, she "stepped forward" at the critical moment when Bruce was controlled by evil people to prevent dangerous energy and nuclear weapons from falling into the hands of evil people.

But if anyone in the entire trilogy really fell in love with Batman, it was Catwoman. The emotional development of Batman and Catwoman is actually very delicate. Their emotional development cannot be like eating and flirting like ordinary people. First of all, Catwoman is a thief who lives in the slums and is eager to clear her criminal record. And from the beginning of the film, she stole Bruce's mother's necklace, stole his fingerprints, made him bankrupt, and also allowed dangerous weapons to fall into the hands of the villain. hand. Then he tricked him into going to the sewers and was maimed by Bain and almost died. After returning from nirvana, Batman chose to continue to believe in her, gave her the procedures to clear her criminal record, and gave her the task of saving the people. From the beginning, Catwoman felt guilty when he saw him being "beaten to death", to being moved by his trust in her actions. Moreover, everything Catwoman did was just to start over, and she was not a pure villain.

Let’s go back to the classic sentence in the first movie, “It doesn’t matter who I am under the surface, what matters is what I do!” This sentence originally appeared by Rachel. He was disgusted with Bruce's disguised image and said harsh words, but he saved Rachel before Batman's final battle. When Rachel asked Batman's name, Batman cleverly responded with this sentence. This sentence not only shows the identity and satirizes the superficiality of the unknown Rachel, but also shows that it is not important who is Batman, what is important is what Batman has done! This sentence is also echoed in the third film. As a sub-theme, it paved the way for Robin to become the heir. Anyone can be Batman. The important thing is that Batman itself has become a symbol of justice and hope, a legend! The power of this symbol is not limited to individuals. What he did could even encourage those who had just escaped from the siege to confront the gun-wielding bandits. He began to slowly approach the bandits, and seemed to have doubts. However, when Batman's plane appeared and destroyed an armored vehicle, the flames of the bat-shaped logo engulfed the building. When the blazing fire announced the return of the dark leader (more like a totem), the people cheered and roared towards the bandits regardless of their own safety. The police chief who had been hiding at home and unwilling to go out also put on his uniform and led the way, and even died in the line of duty. .

It can be said that this sentence is an important clue throughout the trilogy like "Why do we fall? Only in this way can we learn to stand up."

In the first part, in the bar, Bruce went to see the black boss, thinking he would risk it all, but the black boss said he could shoot him in front of the prosecutor: "You thought you could risk it all, but you didn't. Think about it clearly, you didn't expect that working in the District Attorney's Office, your childhood sweetheart girlfriend, and your old housekeeper who was loyal to you, you have too many things to worry about. You thought your parents were shot to death. , can you understand the ugliness of human nature? You don't understand the suffering of people at all. You are the proud son of Gotham. Everyone knows your name. Don't come here to be a great hero. You don't understand the world of crime at all. What you don't understand will always scare you."

This passage not only introduced young Bruce to the world of crime, but also allowed him to determine his own course: although fighting. Crime, but without using swords or guns as a foreshadowing, because when you integrate into that world, your sense of right and wrong will be blurred, and you will begin to sympathize with criminals. And this incident also taught Bruce that wearing a mask is not to protect himself, but to protect the people he cares about. At the same time, it also paved the way for him to educate Robin in the third part to do good deeds but also to keep a mask.

"The Dark Knight Rises" is not a single film, it is entirely the end of a trilogy. So there is no plot to pave the way for the follow-up, it is really just the ending. Even if it doesn't follow the trend and is not filmed in 3D, it is to maintain a high degree of consistency with the previous two films and make it a whole. This film allows the people who died in the first two films to play their roles, allowing the sacrifices of Batman II to be sublimated in this one.

This movie is indeed the most perfect ending I have ever seen. In the end, Batman did not die, he just died as Bruce. (It is stated in the film that Bruce repaired the autopilot function of the aircraft as early as 6 months ago, so the final aircraft was actually unpiloted.) As the film shows The inheritance of the Wayne family is not just bricks and mortar. He arranged everything he could, his inheritance, his, his heirs, and even went to Florence to let the old butler Afu's heart be restored. Comfort (I cried when I saw this part but couldn’t live up to expectations). He retired and lived the happy life of an ordinary person that the old housekeeper wanted him to live.

As the perfect successor to Batman, Robin has a sense of justice and has passed the test of experience. He is very measured and methodical in doing things. He also feels that the shackles of the law are too restrictive for crime fighters. The most important thing is that he He had a similar childhood experience as Batman. At the end of the film, the big screen went black, and The Dark Knight Rises suddenly appeared on it. This also showed the rise of Batman's spirit, and Robin would become the rise of a new generation of Batman. Batman has become a spirit, a soul, a legend.