Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Traditional festivals - What to say about 'The Return of the Great Sage'?

What to say about 'The Return of the Great Sage'?

Looking at the movie as a whole, it's a bit of a Hollywood model plot-wise, but it's still a bold and successful innovation. The whole story becomes more accessible to modern people, and with some contemporary dialog settings, the Monkey King morphs from a monkey in The Journey to the West into a grounded animated figure that is more likely to evoke young people's emotional ****songs.

In addition, The Return of the Great Sage has changed the qualities of the previous Journey to the West-themed animated film's audience group of young children, but turned to the development of the whole age. After hundreds of years of cultural inheritance, the image of the Monkey King Sun Wukong has been rooted in the hearts of every Chinese person, and is not an image that belongs exclusively to the lower age groups.

The Return of the Great Sage of Journey to the West is a 3D animated film based on traditional Chinese mythology expanded and interpreted by High Road Animation, Hengdian Film and Television, October Animation, Microfilm Technology, etc. It is co-produced by Tian Xiaopeng, and co-dubbed by Zhang Lei, Lin Zijie, Liu Jiuyong and Tong Zirong. The film tells the story of the Monkey King, who has been diving under the Five Elements Mountain for 500 years, being unsealed by his childhood monk, Jiang Liuer, by mistake, and finding his original heart and completing his self-redemption in the adventurous journey of mutual companionship.

The best thing about "The Return of the Great Sage" is that it's so accurate to the genre that it's basically following the classic Hollywood style in every move, and it's kind of finally laying the groundwork for the animated genre.

Four hundred years after the Great Pandemonium, the Great Sage of Qi Tian Da Sheng has become a legend. In the city of Chang'an, which is infested with mountain demons, the people live in fear of their lives. The orphaned Jiang Liu'er and the traveling monk Fa Ming depend on each other for their lives, and the young boy often longs for the Monkey King, who made a mess of the Palace of Heaven.