80% of the time in the whole film is about a week of two people getting along, and a lot of time is spent talking about one thing without feeling redundant at all. The main character has no sense of disobedience. The male lead plays this freak to the core. He handles livestock and farm affairs proficiently without embarrassment at all. He handles a lot of details very well. The first time I added seasonings, and the part about adding salt to John's dinner, Dad was the only smile he could barely squeeze out. These details were handled so well that at the end the grandma said, "Like your dad?" John woke up. Their stubbornness was shown by their refusal to talk about cheese in the past, but what they didn't expect was that they agreed with John in the end. Maybe it just happened that Dad had a stroke and didn't agree. From the beginning of pure sensuality, no emotion for life, eating without seasoning, to slowly developing feelings and starting to add seasoning, and finally becoming a soulmate and even trying new foods, his father's stroke gave him a lot of blows, But this also made John see what he wanted, that the ending was a little too sweet. After losing it, I miss it even more. Although it is a bit old-fashioned, it is really useful. This is the reality. What I don't understand at all is that when G lived in the RV, he put a picture on the wall and couldn't see what it was. (Digression: Why do I like the second male's clothes so much)
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