How do you think that the two-week box office of Your Name is basically the same as that of Big Fish Begonia?

I really don't understand the superiority of those who think Cheng Ge's films are better than big fish. Good painting, in Cheng Ge's place, is the intention, in the big fish's place, this is the artistic disease (you fish are shameful, not even black). Crossing such a conventional story, because Cheng Ge did it, it is "although the story is slightly conventional", and the story of big fish is forcibly defined as the story of green tea bitch and himself. . . There are many bugs, because Cheng Ge did it, so it is "although there are bugs, it does not affect the central idea". For the part that the big fish can't explain, we started looking for a high point without waiting for the next part to fill the hole. I don't want to talk about it, I think, Cheng Ge is also my male god, but the shortcoming is the shortcoming. Every shortcoming of Cheng Ge's movies is obvious. Angry. I think these people are ugly, mean, confused and hypocritical human beings. Because I didn't want to be the object of criticism by the majority, I turned myself into the majority. Therefore, praise your name when it is popular, and criticize it when the big fish can't stand it. It's not that you don't value your own ideas, but that you don't have any. It's sad. Fighting with dirty wild dogs falling into the sewer, that's you. Personally, I think the return of the Great Sage is different from that of the big fish Haitang. At least from the propaganda point of view, the first emotional animation is feelings, and the second emotional animation is hype. The overall production of "Your Name" is definitely better than the first two films, both in terms of plot and picture effect technology. Its box office is better than the big fish, so I think it is normal, which shows that the cinema audience is selective now, and your name is definitely lower than the big fish in terms of box office subsidies, which further proves that the animation market is gradually becoming a word-of-mouth movie. . . I hope it can stay like this.