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2023 Welcome to your IE 3 class blog. The object of this class project is to log in and write your comments, web links, answers to questions, and your questions to others at least twice a week. It's fun and you can include pictures or graphics. Keep it original, helpful, and interesting. Don't forget to spellcheck your work before publishing. Also, when you create your user name, please use your real first name, in Romaji (ex. Ryuki, Mari, Lisa, etc.) so that we know who we are communicating with. Enjoy, and Blog on!

Saturday, June 16, 2012

Varmints

I think this movie had a very direct criticism against civilization. Also, a respect towards nature. The way this movie showing that nature gets destroyed by civilization is completely depicting civilization as an evil. When nature was still there, everything was peaceful and great, but once civilization had taken over nature, everybody became lifeless, gloomy and like a slave.This theme, comparison of nature and civilization is something very common in American literature, so I think this movie has been created in America or intended to be an American style. I think the last scene that some nature revived floating in the sky and snow falling didn't have much deep meaning in it. I think it was just a meaning thing to make the movie seem abstruse.