"Mo Di" Her acceptance of her own disease and the treatment of the group has a calm and kind strength. She is like holding a flower, and she values everything she has. Uncovering Mo Di's family, illness, appearance, and past, the film explores how a person like her feels about the world. The world presented by those paintings is so warm, perhaps this is the standard for evaluating a person. At one point in the film, after Mo Di received a large number of painting orders, the details of the more stooped figure were handled very well after a long period of painting. There are many rural photography in photography, and the pictures are extremely beautiful. The soundtrack is highly consistent with the situation, but it is not sensationalized. Sally Hawkins' "The Shape of Water" and this film are both discussing the love formed by a shared life experience, or the redemption caused by loneliness, but it has become a form of beautiful love. "I can sleep upstairs, I'm not noble."
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