Without Cole, Carter wouldn't be able to write a hundred bucket lists because, like Cole said, most people always say, symbolically, I want..want..the colorful things in my mind. The plan is wild, but in the end, I still live in the same place, what should I do.
When a normal person sees someone else making a bucket list, they should say: Are u crazy? But Cole didn't. Not only did he not join him, but he also joined in with great interest. I have to say, the items he added were all cool, skydiving, Kissing the most beautiful girl in the world makes me clap my hands like crazy.
And when he was skydiving, he was so cute: he jumped with the pilot without fear and soared in the sky, even if the former shouted in his ear: We have reached a dangerous height, pull the rope of the parachute, he still remains Intoxicated, she sang "I used to love too", lamenting that this is the feeling of living.
When the trip was over, and Carter drove him to his daughter's door without telling Cole in advance, I thought Cole would knock on the door naturally and put on a warm scene of grief and hatred. Unexpectedly, this stubborn old man was furious and told Carter "I'm not everyone", hey, what a stubborn temper.
So later when Carter was surrounded by his family and food and prayed with his hands folded, Cole's pitiful and desolate feeling alone in a huge house but couldn't even open a bag was contrasted extremely directly. "Is he crying?---I don't know, he's always happy." In fact, these two lines were superfluous before Jack Nicholson's superb acting.
And I thought that the "kiss the most beautiful girl in the world" on the list was Karl going to have an affair, or asking for a kiss from the most beautiful star with money, but he never expected that he would kiss his granddaughter in the end. It was originally guessed that recognizing the father and daughter to resolve the conflict should be a tear-jerking highlight. Who knew that his daughter didn't even have a full face shot, and the tears originally brewed for the imagined scene were all blooming on the little girl's sweet smile. That moment spewed out.
At the beginning of the movie, with Kurt's narration: Carl died in May...", I thought the back of the climber was the surviving Kurt, who was fulfilling one of the last wishes of the two people. Who knows In the end, it turned out that the climber was Carl's assistant. When he opened the box on the top of the mountain and saw the urn, I couldn't help but sigh. I remember when they were in the Taj Mahal, Cole said he didn't know Doubts about how to die? Burial - he's claustrophobic; cremation - he's afraid he'll feel the flames and doesn't know what to do with the ashes. That's fine, bury the ashes on a high snowy mountaintop On---it's illegal! This old man really achieved what he wanted, and even his death was so unique, completely different from what he called Everyone.
Carl's passage at Kurt's funeral was really touching, and I remember a long passage. I don't know every word and every sentence, but I suddenly thought of a sentence I saw elsewhere before, and it is not uncomfortable to use it here: I hope that one day when I am unable to age again, we can all be moved and proud of each other
. Let's love, even if the heart is full, even if one day it's just you and me.
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