Superheroes don’t always need to have six packs and cooldemeanors. They can also have a chubby face, a beer belly anda warm smile like the white inflatable healthcare robot Baymax from Disney’s Oscar-winning 3-Danimated film Big Hero
6.Based on a Marvel comic, the film centers on 14-year-old robotics prodigy Hiro Hamada. After hisolder brother Tadashi, who is a university student delving into robotics loses his life in a fire, the boyreprograms Tadashi’s Baymax into a fighting robot and forms a superhero team to investigate thetruth behind the tragic accident.Most Disney films start out with a feeling of impending doom. However, when trouble hits, ouremotional investment in the characters only increases. We don’t want to see the innocent robotbecome an instrument of revenge.The ending of the movie seems a bit predictable. When Hiro’s possessed with thoughts of revenge,it is video clips of his brother that keep him from being swallowed by rage. Some might say thistransformation comes too easily. But I’d rather believe family affection has this power. It’s love thatinspires the young, indifferent genius to start to care about people around him and the world,changing Hiro into a true hero.
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