Three domestic movies with wrong views!

I mentioned in the article before that some of the problems of award-winning films in the mainland, such as "Qiu Ju Fights a Lawsuit", "Yellow Earth", "Red Sorghum", "The Red Lantern Hangs High", etc., are some very bad works, which have smeared the mainland.

Some book friends retorted that Hollywood movies also have a lot of works that smear the government, and there are also many works that expose social reality, so my thoughts are biased.

But I think that in mainstream Hollywood movies, his values are still consistent with the mainstream values of American society. Although there are all kinds of strange people, all kinds of strange things, and all kinds of ideological trends are rampant in American society, the most mainstream values in society are still centered on Puritan thought. Such as piety, humility, seriousness, honesty, diligence and frugality, etc. Of course, there are also freedom, tolerance, democracy, fairness, individualism, etc.

The values expressed in mainstream American movies are basically inseparable from these words. Even if someone cites the example of "Dances with Wolves", in fact, he is in line with the mainstream values of the United States, that is, he echoes the three views of the American people. It is a movie with three positive views.

Some of Hong Kong's mainstream values are traditional Chinese values, such as righteousness, bravery, forbearance, etc., and some Western values, such as individualism, egoism, etc. So even a movie like "Crazy Boy" is actually a movie with three more positive views. Of course, it is good for you to learn righteousness and bravery, but it is wrong for you to learn to cut people, kill people and bully people.

But what kind of values do domestic films such as "Red Sorghum", "Qiu Ju Fights a Lawsuit", "The Red Lantern Hangs High", and "Xiao Wu"?

Do these values coincide with traditional Chinese values?!

As I said before, whether it is red sorghum, Qiu Ju is in a lawsuit, whether the red lantern is hanging high, or Xiao Wu, the characters in it are thin, the thoughts are perverted, and the soul is distorted.

In a word, the three views are not correct!

From the 80s to the present, this problem has not changed.

Is the three views of "Let the Bullets Fly" correct?! (To be continued......)