Geeks logo

Kong: Skull Island

Kong: Skull Island

By yahoo.comPublished 5 years ago 3 min read

When watching "Kong: Skull Island" on the weekend, there was a particularly profound shot.

King Kong finished playing with those who broke into his own territory during the day, and suffered a whole body injury, and looked at the starry sky alone at night. In the bright night sky, there is a dazzling scenery like aurora, and under the starry sky is King Kong's huge body.

That picture is still clearly printed in my mind.

I have seen many kinds of loneliness with different meanings, or photos or words, but the picture in the movie has always had a great impact like being apart from the world, which made loneliness become unprecedented silence at that moment.

Seems to be associated with many similar human individuals.

At the end of the film, the veteran who has been forgotten on that island for decades returns to the United States, returns to his native land, and reunites with his family. In my opinion, it is intentionally or unintentionally kickback the picture about loneliness, which makes the loneliness of the whole film to the extreme.

At the end of the day, the ability of animals and humans to feel lonely should be figured out.

I have seen such a comment on music playing software, "You are so lonely, but you say you are nice".

Yes, loneliness is really hard to get. Most of the time, people choose to be brave and force themselves to turn their attention to comfort.

Give yourself a reason to comfort and make up for the sense of security stolen by loneliness.

There are many differences among individuals, but loneliness resonates.

The American Air Force veterans who have been forgotten in an island with only giant monsters and indigenous people with difficulty in communication are equal to those who have just finished working overtime and took the empty last bus to go home alone.

Therefore, when the film ended, the expression of "loneliness" floated more strongly in my body than the issues clearly expressed in films such as "anti-war" and "respect for nature".

King Kong, who is still growing up, takes on the responsibility of defending the whole island. This is the territorial consciousness and animal instinct as an animal and the king of the island. But when you learn that King Kong, who lost his parents, needs a person to face this responsibility, a bitter feeling will sprout in his heart, and this kind of bitterness happens to be built behind King Kong's need to fight alone.

It is a magnificent and lonely thing for a person to fight like a family and a whole team to protect himself and his home.

If King Kong is a human being, he is a hero who saves the city and even the country in heroic movies.

Here, King Kong to his island, American soldiers left on the island to his country, seem to have completed a certain degree of connotation.

At the beginning of the movie, the air force soldier falls on this island and fights with Japanese soldiers alone.

Similarly, King Kong was alone in resisting the bullets of intruders.

They are all fighting alone for their homeland and country.

Every lonely hero hides great loneliness, which starts from the moment King Kong lost his parents and the American veteran left behind on the island.

I think, people who shoulder the same instinctive general duties, and those who are struggling alone, can appreciate this feeling of loneliness more or less.

I remember seeing a short video on Weibo not long ago.

A young man on the Japanese subway cried while eating bread.

That feeling of sadness and loneliness overflowed from the screen, but as bystanders, we can only feel these things, because what made him so, as if he had been wronged, we all knew nothing.

This is the way that the world gives back to everyone and every loneliness.

It is calm and MoMo.

But no matter what, the person who cried on the subway, the person who was sleepy on the last bus, had to go home silently after embracing this loneliness.

The next day, at the moment of awakening, continue to fight alone.

Perhaps, when we saw King Kong, we also saw lonely and great selves.

review

About the Creator

Reader insights

Be the first to share your insights about this piece.

How does it work?

Add your insights

Comments

There are no comments for this story

Be the first to respond and start the conversation.

Sign in to comment

    Find us on social media

    Miscellaneous links

    • Explore
    • Contact
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms of Use
    • Support

    © 2026 Creatd, Inc. All Rights Reserved.