What should I say, its main core is romance films, followed by ethics films and philosophical films. Or you don't need to go too deep into it, this is the true portrayal of you and me who are ups and downs in the cold and warm human feelings in the world, a more illusory but incompetent and ridiculous. It still reminds you and me deeply: nothing lasts forever.
Whether it was the moment when you and I first met, or the love and pain that I once thought was unforgettable. What's even more rare is that many years later, I can stand beside a passerby you are not familiar with and look at you, talking and laughing on my own.
I don't really like the fact that it has to be in the background of Hiroshima, probably because I have a Chinese position.
The writer's idea is to put human love in the context of war, probably to think about the unique sparks that people have created in turbulent times. This is also slightly redundant. War has never been a factor in denying or affirming love. People say that friendship in arms is the most sincere kind of love other than family love. The heroine's feelings for the first love are also slightly similar to this - there is so much turmoil outside, but we have to live in our own little world, we are forever, we are forever.
But, but, from the time when her hair grew and she could really feel the smell of the soil in the cracks of the wall, she could feel that she had forgotten the first love that was once in the ocean.
Later she meets her husband, the man who goes by the pseudonym "Hiroshima," or even a stranger who doesn't even have a name. Isn't she alone? Shuttle in the crowd of people, as they surging, completely forget the original heart.
It can be this man today, that man tomorrow, and another man the day after.
As Mu Xin said: "Love is a very small possibility in human nature."
After adulthood, choose to satisfy your desires on the premise of preserving yourself.
View more about Hiroshima Mon Amour reviews