飞屋环游记观后感
《飞屋环游记》讲述了一个老人曾经与老伴约定去一座坐落在遥远南美洲的瀑布旅行,却因为生活奔波一直未能成行,直到政府要强拆自己的老屋时才决定带着屋子一起飞向瀑布,路上与结识的小胖子罗素一起冒险的经历。
飞屋环游记观后感【篇一】
我知道一个人这一生必须有一个梦想,只有这样我们才有信念将这一生完整的走下去,可是带着梦想遗憾地离开了这个世界,又是何等凄凉的情景?怀揣着它,只能期盼着自己下辈子去完成这个始终还在准备中的梦想。所求之物,到自己闭眼的那一刻还只能远观,这也许就是老者心中的痛,为了妻子这个梦想,他选择了远行,完成这个单纯而又简单的愿望。
是的,这部电影就是这么简单的情节,简单的爱情故事,简单的梦想,简单的追求,简单的执着,可是要完成这么多简单却是那么难的一件事,以至于现实中我们都喜欢退却着,我们喜欢找理由,是现实牵绊着我们一直不敢往前走去寻找自己的梦想,简单而又单纯的梦想只能深深的埋藏自己的心底。
《飞屋环游记》就是讲的这么简单的一个故事,故事的开始用了长长的四分钟讲述完了他们从相识,到走进婚礼的殿堂,然后牵着手一起走到老,没有声音,也没有跌宕起伏的生活情节,简简单单的从开始到结尾,然后剩下老者就这么默默的守着满屋子的回忆开始自己那沉沉的思念。
梦想的实现有时候是有那么一点点艰难,他们一开始存钱就为了那个简单的梦想,可是柴米油盐酱醋茶,一切生活的需要都阻止着他们前行的步伐,一次次的砸存钱罐,一次次的满罐,直到岁月过去,亲爱的她已经坐上了轮椅,开始不了那远行的计划,就这么老去,留下一屋子的梦想和回忆让老者慢慢品味。
我知道对于一个快离去的老者来说,要做出这样的决定会是怎样的困难,这个屋子是他们一起建立起来的,他不容得别人就这么轻易进入,于是他下定决心要拖着这个他们建立的家一起远行,他要让在另一个世界的她知道他一直就在努力着。
总有那么些人,那么些事喜欢在你登上高峰的时候给你一盆冷水,让你彻底跌入谷底,在这个寻梦的路途中,老者的生活并不是像想象中那么的顺理成章的去实现了梦想,查尔斯出现了,这个在他们生命中的偶像,人们一般对自己的崇拜者不会怀有任何戒备心理的,老者如此,我们亦如此,可是查尔斯善变的脸庞吓着了所有人,老者的梦想路也就开始了那么不平坦。
看到那一幕,我心里的防线彻底崩溃了,是怎样的无助让他做出了那样的选择,当罗素让他去救那只鸟的时候,他站在了两个难以抉择的路口,一边是受伤的小鸟被绑住了,可另一边是自己拿承载着满满梦想的房子正在大火的燃烧中,一个个气球的爆炸,一个个心碎的声音也就爆发了出来,他最后选择托着他的小屋离开,他将火扑灭,可是那痛苦的眼神告诉着我们他很内疚眼睁睁看着查尔斯无情的将小鸟带走。
他知道自己背叛了罗素,背叛了这段最珍贵的友情,坐在了他日思梦想的地方,可是他却迷失了方向,在这里我特别害怕他会跳下悬崖就这样结束这段生命,那就是最残忍的结局了,可是编剧没有,罗素自己去找小鸟了。他迷茫的回到了那个小屋,试图在里面寻找到一些方向,最后他用了世界上最大的勇气将东西从小屋里扔了出来,他扔的不仅仅是东西,更是对过去的抛弃,他知道是她在另一个世界告诉他应该这么做,梦想实现了,那么我们还要继续的是生活,于是生活又回了来。回到了原点。
人们都说,有梦想的地方就会有斗争,也许就是这样的吧,这部影片让我潸然泪下,我知道一切都要简单就好,于是我也决定守着那简单的梦想就这么永远的走下去,也许梦想无人问津,但我相信我也会像老者一样,总会有那么一天,会实现的。
飞屋环游记观后感【篇二】
In its opening stretch the new Pixar movie “Up” flies high, borne aloft by a sense of creative flight and a flawlessly realized love story. Its on-screen and unlikely escape artist is Carl Fredricksen, a widower and former balloon salesman with a square head and a round nose that looks ready for honking. Voiced with appreciable impatience by Ed Asner, Carl isn’t your typical American animated hero. He’s 78, for starters, and the years have taken their toll on his lugubrious body and spirit, both of which seem solidly tethered to the ground. Even the two corners of his mouth point straight down. It’s as if he were sagging into the earth.
Eventually a bouquet of balloons sends Carl and his house soaring into the sky, where they go up, up and away and off to an adventure in South America with a portly child, some talking (and snarling and gourmet-cooking) dogs and an unexpected villain. Though the initial images of flight are wonderfully rendered — the house shudders and creaks and splinters and groans as it’s ripped from its foundation by the balloons — the movie remains bound by convention, despite even its modest 3-D depth. This has become the Pixar way. Passages of glorious imagination are invariably matched by stock characters and banal story choices, as each new movie becomes another manifestation of the movie-industry divide between art and the bottom line.
In “Up” that divide is evident between the early scenes, which tell Carl’s story with extraordinary tenderness and brilliant narrative economy, and the later scenes of him as a geriatric action hero. The movie opens with the young Carl enthusing over black-and-white newsreel images of his hero, a world-famous aviator and explorer, Charles Muntz (Christopher Plummer). Shortly thereafter, Carl meets Ellie, a plucky, would-be adventurer who, a few edits later, becomes his beloved wife, an adult relationship that the director Pete Docter brilliantly compresses into some four wordless minutes during which the couple dream together, face crushing disappointment and grow happily old side by side. Like the opener of “Wall-E” and the critic’s Proustian reminiscence of childhood in “Ratatouille,” this is filmmaking at its purest.
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