My Favourite Movies <(^-^)>
Big Hero 6
"Big Hero 6" is an action-packed comedy-adventure about robotics prodigy Hiro Hamada, who learns to harness his genius-thanks to his brilliant brother Tadashi and their like-minded friends: adrenaline junkie Go Go Tamago, neatnik Wasabi, chemistry whiz Honey Lemon and fanboy Fred. When a devastating turn of events catapults them into the midst of a dangerous plot unfolding in the streets of San Fransokyo, Hiro turns to his closest companion-a robot named Baymax-and transforms the group into a band of high-tech heroes determined to solve the mystery.
I actually watched this movie last year on December 17, 2014 just right after our last common test paper. We first ate at eighteen chefs before the movie and the experiences was awesome. Not only was the movie good, I also got a chance to eat my favourite pasta with double cheese with chilli cheese fries. It all about the cheese. :)
When the movie started, there was a movie about a dog and we wonder whether we went to the wrong location. Confirmed about being in the right location we continued watching the show. It seems that the movie was Feast, the story of one man's love life is seen through the eyes of his best friend and dog, Winston, and revealed bite by bite through the meals they share.
Going back to the movie, Big Hero 6
Iron Man is not in this movie. We should get that out of the way right up front. But if you liked Iron Man like my friend, and the idea that someone can create wondrous and deadly things with technology appeals to you, then you might like Big Hero 6. This is a story about robots big and small, but it’s also one about friendship, loss, and trying to fix things that cannot always be mended. It manages to deliver in most of those areas with humor and without being preachy. And yes, there’s a big, rubbery robot that can fly.
It started as
People in San Fransokyo fight robots for money, and the main
character, Hiro Hamada, has built one so good it makes short work of its
opponents, ripping them limb from limb. But his older brother Tadashi
wants Hiro to leave behind the seedy alleys of the city to come join him
at the San Fransokyo Institute of Technology. Part of his pitch
involves showing him Baymax, a large, white inflatable robot that
Tadashi invented to serve as a portable doctor. Realizing he could be
building similar projects, Hiro decides he wants in.
But for Hiro, it’s not as simple as writing an essay about his summer vacation to get into this college. The university requires him to come up with something to wow the program’s professor. Hiro’s answer are tiny robots that can be controlled by thought. Hiro believes that the microbots could be useful for things like transportation and construction, and his demonstration of those possibilities is one of the film’s most memorable scenes. That demo sets off a bidding war between people who want to develop the technology commercially, and those who want it for science.
But for Hiro, it’s not as simple as writing an essay about his summer vacation to get into this college. The university requires him to come up with something to wow the program’s professor. Hiro’s answer are tiny robots that can be controlled by thought. Hiro believes that the microbots could be useful for things like transportation and construction, and his demonstration of those possibilities is one of the film’s most memorable scenes. That demo sets off a bidding war between people who want to develop the technology commercially, and those who want it for science.
Later the movie escalates from there, introducing a masked man named Yokai, our antagonist and genuinely one of the scariest villains to grace a Disney film in years. Donned in black and wearing a white kabuki mask, Yokai's stolen Hiro's microbots, and produces a seemingly never-ending sea of them that he wields (often poorly) as weapons. With the help of Baymax, and several students, Hiro forms a rag-tag group to face Yokai, each of them using technology they’ve cooked up in the university’s labs to give themselves unique powers.
Big Hero 6 is ultimately enjoyable but it can be frustrating. If you’re expecting city-destroying robot fights the likes of Transformers, you won’t find them here. And likewise if you’re looking for some real chemistry and believable friendships between a group of unlikely heroes, that’s not quite here either. Where Big Hero 6 succeeds, and succeeds big, is in the friendship between Hiro and Baymax. They’re an odd couple and their relationship explores the need for companionship. That Disney manages to pull that off with an inflatable talking robot is better than any special effects you’ll see on screen.
I guess the only thing I hated about this movie is that ... dies for nothing. :p
Rating: 9 / 10
-Kaito
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