Friday, May 17, 2019

I learned something from the night scene of the museum - the battle of Smithsonian

So today is Sunday, this is usually the day I spend a day off on a blog, spending time with people [usually family], and I don't have that much time on weekdays. My uncle asked us yesterday if some people want to go out to watch a movie today, so I agree, I don't know which movie we will watch.

When I was told that we would see the night at Museum 2, I was a bit embarrassed because the movie looked like a child. However, since my two cousins ​​wanted to see it, I just followed it, and we all went out to watch it as a family movie on Sunday.

At first, I didn't know what would happen because I had never seen the first one, but the plot was not difficult to understand. This started with a wealthy businessman named Larry Daley [played by Ben Stiller] who was interviewed on a show to promote his new invention: the light in the dark flashlight. Later, he visited the museum he had worked on as a night guard and noticed that all meaningful works were shipped to the Federal Archives, because now people want an upgraded museum with future technology. He has one night to prevent this from happening.

On this evening, he had a good and evil adventure with some of the most interesting characters in the film, including Amelia Earhart, evil pharaoh Kahmunrah [Hank Azaria], Jedediah Smith [Owen Wilson] and Theodore Roosevelt [Robin Williams]. Larry received a call from Jeddy Dias, who said they were being attacked by an army of evil pharaohs who were looking for magical tables - this tablet should release all the underworld servants who would destroy the world he was about to conquer. Larry's job is to protect it from happening before sunrise, and he succeeded with the help of his intimate companion, Amelia Earhart.

At the end of the movie, all parts of the museum are preserved, not shipped away. The museum is open to the public in New York, somehow all the characters - statues, sculptures, fossils, etc. - are once again active, because the magical tablet [the main prize in the movie] becomes as entertaining as the public. The futuristic museum will be. Larry Daly then sold his business and returned to the museum as a night guard. When the film is about to retire, he will see the exact character playing Amelia Earhart in the museum; they meet, she asks him to take him to see, and he agrees to do so.

I didn't really go into the movie looking forward to anything, but after seeing it, it was not that bad. I want to say that for a light audience, this is a good 105 minutes of warm entertainment. Most people, especially my family, started talking about what to do next after the movie ended, and might see the film as an invisible movie. Come on, let's face it, how many movies are there? too much. But I tried to see if the movie contains a deeper message than visual entertainment, because entertainment is not that big for me, and there is no lasting and meaningful effect. That's why I am not a fan of stupid comedy-type movies.

But looking at this movie, I want to say simple, comprehensive information is to do what you like, you will seek true happiness. Simple but profound, and easy to pass Larry's [Ben Stiller] storyline from the beginning of the movie to the end of the movie.

For example, he was teased by George Foreman at the beginning of the movie, who laughed at him for being a "night guard" in the museum, a work that was incomparable to the "mind man." A big company. The audience laughed. When he walked out of the industry, you can say that although he was wearing a suit and driving a beautiful car, part of him seemed to be gone.

In the middle of the movie, he faces theodore Roosevelt [Robin Williams] and then the entire exhibition will be shipped the next day. Theodore spoke to him and his finals. "Larry, the key to true happiness is..." But Larry was interrupted by a business call. When he looked back again, it was too late, because the sunrise had turned these numbers back into inanimate objects.

Until the movie is coming to an end and he has another chance to ask Theodore Roosevelt, "Hey, do you remember the key to true happiness when you said that the sunrise was cut off?"

"Oh, yes." Theodore replied.

"Well, I understand," Larry said.

"what is that?"

"It does what you like with people you love."

"Oh... I just want to talk about physical exercise, but it works."

Theodore gave him a pat and left. It's fun, but it's also very deep. Larry has learned not only to be famous, to wear a beautiful suit, but to drive a beautiful car, but to do what you like and to do with the people you love. For him, explore the museum exhibition as a Night guards and all the different historical figures with the film.

The lesson I want to share with others is that if you have a job that you hate and you just do it because of money, maybe reconsider choosing a job may not be a bad idea. Even if you may not have much money, you love it. For some people, true happiness comes not only from money, but from what you do and who you do.

So, think and who knows maybe the best thing might be to mix the best of both worlds. But for this movie, Larry does not have to really work, because he enjoys what he does. This can be summed up in Confucius's famous saying, "Choose a job you like, you will never be in yours. Work in the day of life."




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