But even so, I'm still crazy about watching fairytale romance movies. . .
A mellow girl who owns a warm bookstore. The beginning of the film is a romantic and beautiful assumption.
At that time, the Internet was just popular, and everyone was keen to find friends online, chat anonymously, and send E-mails. Well, she and him met on the Internet and sparked.
Both had partners, but in those days, they ignored the person next to their bed and focused on each other's emails in the mailbox. So tacit, so hot, so happy, yes, people of our age may have had such experiences.
Later, she encountered the saddest thing. The small bookstore was crowded out by the big bookstore and had to close, and it was his store that crowded her out. She still sought his comfort in the mail, which became her life-saving straw. She didn't know that the one who knocked her down and the one who supported her were the same person. Later, they tried to meet each other, but they didn't succeed, because when he found out that she was "she", he didn't dare to face it after all. He didn't know whether he was her enemy in real life or her lover in e-mail. In the confusion and confusion, they moved forward step by step, and he let her slowly give up her hatred in reality, and even slowly fell in love with him. In the end, it was the climax, which was also the ending I was most looking forward to. He brought his beloved dog to the center of the street and appeared in front of her. At that time, in fact, it was him who she was looking forward to!
Perfect. The 1998 American film "you have got mail" brought endless comfort to me, who has a sane mind but is in a tangled and troubled world every day.
I finally figured out one thing. Literary and artistic works, such as movies, do not reflect the real world, but rather reflect people's various fantasies about this world. For example, those unreal but particularly beautiful love stories, such as those unrestrained and casual science fiction stories.
There is no love without reason in the world, but so what?
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