The boy was lying on the ground rushing homework for his friend. The strong wind blew the door and the sheets swayed wildly. This scene directly brought me back to the night when I was rushing homework in elementary school. And the powerlessness of looking up and communicating with the "adult" filled the whole body.
The creation of the atmosphere creates an inadvertent empathy, which makes people unable to easily pull out. It seems that when I was a child, I was afraid that the teacher would check the homework. Loneliness, anxiety, and fear pervade the whole body. All emotions are on full display at this moment. In the brightly lit room, it seems that only the dark night blowing outside the door can be seen.
Reminds me of what Bi Gan said in the interview: "When I was a child, I was often alone at home, and the light bulb in the house was broken and flickered. At that time, I was very afraid to be at home alone. Later, when I put this element in the movie, I felt very warm."
The empathy brought by the movie dragged people back to the scene at that time. However, when it was obviously difficult to let go, in the sudden pull of the movie, it no longer seemed difficult to get through, but a dissolution of self-emotion, which became enjoyable. And then accepting it becomes the intense pleasure that "I" is obsessed with, surpassing the material desires brought by eating and the outside world, perhaps because this pleasure is more lasting and more difficult to dissipate.
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