The most intuitive feeling the film gives is:
Why is the girl pregnant, who is the father of the child, who even made her have an unpleasant sexual experience, and has to deal with the child herself... The movie does not mention it, but tells a paragraph with extreme restraint A very simple matter: Qiu Ao, a 17-year-old girl, went to New York to have an abortion, accompanied by her cousin.
The most touching thing in the film is that, except for religious believers, other medical staff who knew that the heroine was pregnant did not look at her with tinted glasses at all. Instead, protect her self-esteem very much and provide her with enough help. Whether she chooses to help her have a child, find an adoption, or spend the least amount of money and conservatively complete the operation.
The heroine's cousin is also equivalent to betraying herself to pay for her.
And all of the above is so restrained, so not overly rendered. The only two close-ups are also used when the cousin puts money into his pocket and hooks up with the heroine.
I like this kind of downplay very much, which is also the most precious point of literary films: Da Yin Xi Sheng.
Without all kinds of shooting techniques and music to incite people to cry and grieve. Purely revealing the incident in front of the audience makes people feel slightly sad, makes people feel sad after thinking about the deep meaning in front of them, and uses the smallest emotions to provoke the audience and touch people's hearts.
There are not too many videos that express the need for love and protection of girls in a charming way, and gently remind everyone that you need to pay attention to women's unspeakable hiddenness.
ps: Really didn't expect "never, rarely, sometimes, always" to mean this.
Related Recommendations: "Three Weeks and Two Days in April"
View more about Never Rarely Sometimes Always reviews