Hello everyone, I'm root
Speaking of weenie the pooh, people are most familiar with the Disney printmaking style Ofoh series. Pooh is a cute little bear who cares most about the happiness and feelings of his friends and friends, and will never eat enough honey.
(The Adventures of Winnie the Pooh)
In 1966, Disney released the first film in the Winnie the Pooh series, "Winnie the Pooh and honey tree", and in 1971, it integrated several short films to release the TV animation "The Adventures of Winnie the Pooh", and since then Winnie the Pooh has swept the world.
Before Disney bought the film and television rights, Winnie the Pooh was first published in a series of well-known storybooks written by British writer AA Milne in 1924. The movie I want to recommend for you today is to tell the origin story of Winnie the Pooh and the layers of strong father-son love.
"Goodbye, Christopher Robin"
Set after World War I, Domnell Gleason plays writer AA Milne, who survived the war and returned home but suffered from severe post-war PTSD (post-traumatic stress disorder).
"Clown Girl" Margot Robbie plays the writer's wife, Daphne, who loves the hustle and bustle and is keen on party travel.
The two had a son, the eldest named Christopher Robin Milne and the younger named Billy.
The couple often travels, leaving the nanny Olive to take care of little Billy.
Milne began to write stage plays and achieved good results, but the shadow of the war has always affected him. Milne, tired of pleasing people and wanting to leave London to write something meaningful, moved the family to a cottage on the outskirts.
Daphne thought Milne had just come here to find inspiration, and the family would move back to London after writing the new play.
But Milne didn't even unpack his writing tools and unhurriedly remodeled his new home.
The two are at odds, Milne needs to think and write an anti-war book, but Daphne thinks that war has become an established fact in their lives to oppose it is pointless. So Daphne packed up her things and left the house.
At this time, the nanny Olive's mother was seriously ill, and she also left, leaving the two fathers and sons who were already estranged to live alone.
"Father-Son War" begins with breakfast, where Billy protests over his father's breakfast, and Milne softens the atmosphere with a very cold joke.
Billy agrees with the anti-war theme his father is writing, and Milne says he's the only one who thinks that way. Billy wanted his father to write a book for himself and said he would read it.
During the period when the two had to be alone, Billy slowly healed his father Grace. Hearing bees and balloons exploding in the past would elicit milne's terrible memories of the war, and his father would become suspicious, neurotic, and even angry at Billy.
But now my father would take Billy, who loved animals, to the forest of the annex for an "adventure", like catching a fluffy teddy bear that had been put away in advance and building a wooden house for these stuffed toys.
Dine with these special guests,
His father also wrote poems for Billy.
Father and son became intimate, shooting arrows, playing ball, fencing, fishing, and exploring the forest near the hut.
The father and son imagine a snow adventure, and the camera turns into ice and snow, and spring returns when they decide to go home.
While spending time with his son, Milne was inspired to create a partner who began to create the story of Winnie the Pooh.
The work went well and the mother also returned to the cottage, although Billy preferred the nanny Olive to return. Soon the fairy tale book based on winnie the pooh was selling well, and various newspapers and magazines wanted to come and interview the bear's owner, Billy (the daimyo Christopher Robin).
With the popularity of Winnie the Pooh, Milne accompanied his son less and less, constantly attended various interviews and shooting, parties, and constantly created new stories, Winnie the Pooh was not only well-known in the Uk but also all the way to the United States.
Billy had to cooperate with his father in these interviews and activities, and the father and son became estranged again.
When Nanny Olive decides to get married, Billy's mother selfishly accuses Olive of abandoning their children. Olive finally couldn't help but say that the couple didn't care about Billy at all, and pulled him to the event to shoot just to sell books.
Milne promised his son that he would never write winnie the Pooh story again and sent him from school to study with other children. But because of Christopher Robin's special title, Billy is bullied by some bad kids at school.
The 18-year-old Billy decided to join the army because in the army he only had a number and people wouldn't care that he was Christopher Robin. As an adult, Billy is played by Alex Lauser, the male protagonist of last year's hit British drama "Go to His* World".
Aside from paying too much attention to billy's upbringing, what he really cares about is that the adventures and play in the forest with his father in his childhood was just his father's research to write books?
Billy stepped onto the battlefield with resentment and disappointment, as if he were still the little Billy with the mushroom head.
The father finally realized how much the book he had written had hurt his son. At first, it was the ordinary daily life of father and son, and after writing books and becoming famous, Milne began to be fascinated by the stories he created, and no longer spent time and time with his son.5 Billy, who longs for his father's care, just wants to play with his father.
Returning home from the battlefield, Billy and his father come to the place where they spent together as children, and the father and son talk, and Billy hears everyone singing a song from Winnieri on the battlefield, which accompanies everyone home.
Billy felt the hope and happiness that Winnie the Pooh brought and inspired countless families torn apart by the war, and it all began when his father showed the story to the world, and Billy was the first to know the song. Winnie the Pooh belongs first to him and his father, and finally to everyone.
Those happy times spent with my father were written into books and seen by the whole world, so that people in war times remembered what happiness was, and when everything was broken, childhood could have such a peaceful and happy happy time. Billy said that childhood is wonderful and wonderful, and painful is growth.
It's a movie you can watch with your family and learn about the origins of a well-known fairy tale. Remind us that we were all once just children, and what we need is more companionship and care from our families.