On rainy nights, it is suitable to watch any type of disc, preferably the kind that makes you fall asleep after watching it. Then when I opened my eyes, it was midnight. The room was very dark, and the TV was full of snowflakes. I could only hear the sound of electricity in the room. The rain was still falling outside the window.
So, I randomly took one from a stack of discs, and sent it in without even reading the name.
The title is out, "The Bucket List." Co-starring Jack Nicholson and Morgan Freeman. After watching it, I realized that this film can only be played by two people. If it was someone else, the two roles would be played badly. In fact, some of the supporting roles in the film, such as doctors and secretaries, don't cover much, but they are equally wonderful.
This is the story of two men, an old man, and a dying old man who both had cancer and could not live much longer. This kind of subject matter is actually an adventure, easy to conceptualize, easy to be hypocritical, easy to be cheaply provocative and pretend to be profound.
After reading it, I feel that there are indeed some concepts, some hypocritical, and quite emotional (of course, it is very light and very light), and it does seem to be profound. Still, it's indisputable that I put it three stars in my collection, which is the highest rank I've given to my own collection of discs. They are all in the hard-to-reach place at the top of the DVD cabinet, so that my friends can't see them when they come, they won't be borrowed, and they'll stay with me all the time.
The two men who were in the same ward, knowing that the time was short, pulled up a list of things they wanted to do in life together (one of them was very rich, so he had material basis for doing these things).
Freeman's ideals are a little more storied, and his list includes: helping a stranger kindly; laughing until you cry; admiring the majestic sights; driving a Ford Mustang; Nicholson (playing the rich public health expert) is more practical, his list includes: kissing the most beautiful girl in the world; getting a tattoo and so on.
Then they did, they went skydiving, got tattoos, drove Ford Mustangs, went to the coast of France, the grasslands of Kenya, the pyramids in the sunset, the Taj Mahal in India, motorcycles on the Great Wall, to their big mountains, though Did not go up. He also kissed the most beautiful girl in the world, helped strangers, and watched the magnificent scene (the specific plot will be omitted, so as not to lose the enjoyment of appreciation for those who have not seen it).
The screenwriter is good, and there are many interesting dialogues, such as, "I like marriage and single life, but unfortunately I can't live both lives at the same time" (well, I also like to live two lives at the same time); for example, "When you are old, remember Three things. First, don't hold back when you want to go to the toilet; second, don't waste it when you can get hard; third, don't think that you can really go to the toilet if you fart.
" , this is actually a serious movie, a movie about life and death. The movie says that we live to die one day. There is a survey, the question is would you like to know your exact date of death? 96% of people do not want to fill in. Two men, discussing whether to bury or cremate after their death. Nicholson was claustrophobic, so he didn't like burials, and said that even if he was buried, he should look for the kind of coffin with a bell. Freeman was afraid of pain, and some worried that he would be scorched by the flames.
Freeman asked Nicholson on the edge of the pyramid (what a beautiful light, by the way), and it got me thinking. Before entering heaven, he said, two questions need to be answered. First, have you found joy in your life? Second, have you brought happiness to others?
Ask yourself, I have found some joy in life, so I have no regrets in death. As for the second question, I am not sure, although I have tried to do so, I do not know how other people really feel.
I have been to many of the places they have gone; some of the things they have done, I have also done. If, let me also list some things that I haven’t done in my life and still want to do, I think about it, I can list these: touch the moon or the stars (this is not counted, it can only be considered a fantasy); go back to In a certain year (this is of course not counted); eat all the foods that should not be, unhealthy, but love to eat for a day; write a novel, can accurately describe the world and life you feel, and keep it; play tennis for the best time Comfortable dessert; go to a place that no one has really been before; go to Luoluowan in Kinmen; learn to play a piano piece you like; take a good photo that you will faint when you see it; drink a cup of Sumatran civet Coffee and a bottle of 1961 Patus wine; DIY a chair; quietly loving someone.
Do this, and on that day, maybe as the movie says, "the eyes are closed, and the heart is open."
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