potholes, roads, pedestrians, bicycles, traffic jams, shoeshine, a small stall selling a few packs of cigarettes to support credit, and our life scene (especially in China in the past few years), I smiled knowingly when I saw it. . At first I couldn't understand what this meal delivery was about. Wasn't the husband or daughter taking it away at work? Close-up of an Indian who picks up lunch boxes from house to house on a bicycle, gets on the train, and then bicycles to the company's "office building" to deliver various lunch boxes. It turned out to be specializing in lunch box express delivery. In countries with too many populations, there are always some interesting industries.
It is also interesting that the male protagonist has a few words: My wife died and was put in a coffin. Sometimes I also want to lie in the coffin, but life gave me a vertical, picture everything, he was standing on the train day after day.. The male protagonist also has a colleague, who is very loud and exaggerated, very "san".
Unfortunately, the three views of the whole film are different. A lonely housewife finds out that the express delivery is wrong and should give her husband a lunch box. She is curious and enjoys the lunch box being eaten cleanly (the husband always She doesn't eat much of her lunch box), and in the next lunch box, the two "get to know" each other through a note. The mother's father is seriously ill, the mother is worried about the medical expenses, the heroine can't do anything, and the heroine finds out that her husband's clothes smell like a woman, all kinds of life difficulties, but the heroine can't wait to reply to the note in this lunch box #I can't stand it when I see this After #female protagonist wrote a note to the male protagonist "I want to see you tomorrow", I shut down the phone with a slap in the face. I had a
different view and was paralyzed. This is not a mental derailment. In fact, I have watched very few Indian movies. I can't stand the endless singing and dancing. The hero and heroine fall in love with every single glance. It's annoying. Plus there are endless news of Indian men raping girls, I have a good impression. Poor, I feel like I'm in estrus on tmd.
He Wei described the problem of Chinese marriage, often not to solve the problem, but to start a new one. At least that's how this film feels to me, so call three different views
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