If you don't look at it with so much rationality, but only experience the feelings inside, it's still quite beautiful. What impresses me is not the male and female protagonists, but the Ueno and the white-haired green tea girl who use two different types of school violence to bully others.
On the one hand, Ueno is hostile to the female protagonist because he likes the male protagonist. On the other hand, she is a straight person who can't hold sand in her eyes. She looks down on the heroine who blames herself for everything and apologizes crazily, and smiles tenderly when she is bullied. She clearly showed her disgust when the classmates around her held a hypocritical or perfunctory attitude towards the heroine. I'd rather believe that she wants to arouse the heroine's sense of resistance to make her less vulnerable. Maybe it's my whims. Anyway, whether it's the wrong way of caring, in a word, school violence is a big mistake, and she is undoubtedly guilty.
In fact, another white-haired green tea woman can be seen often in life. She puts herself on the moral commanding heights, mistakes belong to others, and responsibilities belong to others, such a powerful protective color. A lot of people complained about the happy ending of the friendship, and I was dismayed when I saw the white-haired green tea girl still blaming others in the protagonist group. But maybe this is the complexity of human nature. Didn't she think for a second that she was wrong when she compiled a thousand thousand paper cranes? It's also hard to say.
The ending of The Shape of Voice is good, everyone is out of the haze. I don't know if the people who have been violent on campus in the real society can really get out of that terrible shadow? I guess most people who inflict school violence on others will not admit it honestly like Ueno, but forgive themselves like white-haired green tea, it is others who bully him, I am just a small piece of the stream Just feathers.
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