I think Jackie Chan is a very real person. After reading an interview about Jackie Chan in Gao Xiaosong's "Xiao Shuo", I was deeply impressed by what Jackie Chan said in it. It was probably when Jackie Chan's father was lying in the hospital bed, Jackie Chan said to his father: Dad, if you leave, I won't I came to pay my respects to you. This is a waste of my time and money. I buy paper money to burn and pollute the air. I will be filial to you now. Jackie Chan said that he is very filial to his father, and every day is Christmas and every day is Father's Day. He bought the best cigarettes, the most expensive wine, and the best things for his father. His father smoked and drank all his life. He lived to be 93 years old. He slept when he wanted to sleep and didn't sleep when he didn't want to. He lived a very comfortable life. I deeply agree with what Jackie Chan said.
This is not to encourage people not to worship their loved ones, but if they are truly filial, they should practice it while they are still alive. It's like Jackie Chan said to Jaycee Chan: If you are filial to me, do it now. If I die, don't be filial to me. Whatever you burn for me is fake and a waste of your money.
Many people are always grateful to everyone, to their parents, to their friends, and so on. They always say that these are useless. They always lament in the circle of friends that they love their parents and how good their parents are to you. It’s really Thank you parents. Be more obedient next time and don't talk back all the time. Let them worry less. If you want to thank a friend, treat them to a meal and do something meaningful, don't just pay lip service. Just because you offer incense and flowers to your dead father every day does not mean that you are filial. But you didn't bring tea and water to your father, that's fine. Whether it's family, love or friendship, you have to cherish it. Don't wait until you can't see each other again, crazily missing you, crazily sad, crazily trying to make up for it. What you want to make up for is just to comfort your guilty heart.
There is a kind of people in the world who have achieved dazzling achievements in the fields they care about, but in some fields they have never cared about or thought about it, so they are in a mess. The 2007 Oscar-winning film "The Queen" tells the story of the public opinion crisis the Queen faced before and after the death of Princess Diana. In it, the Queen's lack of sympathy for Diana was defended by: "But this is how she was raised!" She knew the responsibility of the country and dedicated her life to it. She never pursued personal expression and freedom. Will, passionate love. She became the perfect wife and mother on the pound, and by the end, the country was criticizing her for not respecting other people's personal expression and free will. Jackie Chan was born in 1954, which makes him older than the parents of most people here. He had no formal education and was raised by a troupe member. This kind of troupe is similar to the one in "Farewell My Concubine". Jackie Chan, born in 1954, Liu Cixin, born in 1963, and Wang Weizhong, born in 1957, come from three different Chinese backgrounds. Don’t you think they have many similarities in their understanding of personal freedom, social order, relationships between men and women, and family life? This concept is very similar to that of many people’s fathers.
They are old-fashioned heroes cultivated by old-fashioned Chinese concepts. You think you understand freedom and equality, and you understand humanism. What is humanism? It means having understanding and sympathy for historical figures. Moreover, Jackie Chan has really never done anything treacherous or evil. To be harsh to good people and tolerant to bad people is not good intention, it is persecution by the mediocre. To evaluate Jackie Chan's movies, you should watch "Jackie Chan's Stunts": / There is a concept in it that has always inspired me, which is the pursuit of perfection without any meaning, because "the film will always be there after it is released." In fact, no one watches most of the historical films, especially Hong Kong B-level films. But the creative attitude is as if the next work will be seen by history. It is a young man who is obviously a hit at the box office and a hit in terms of word-of-mouth, but still thinks that he is living in the spotlight of history. That was Jackie Chan before he became famous. No matter what foreigners think of him, I know that Jackie Chan has done the thing he cares about perfectly - using traditional Chinese martial arts dramas to assemble low-cost boxing films, and he has become an unprecedented first. You've never tried it, how do you know it's easy?