That apple

Agnes 2022-01-08 08:02:34

Now review: a film that reflects universal humanity, simple but heavy. The director only took 50% of the truth, and the other half of the invisible truth needs to be obtained through thinking. Questions that bother yourself, find answers in conversations with others. The main road stretches towards the horizon, the color is dull, and the car lights draw a bright line as close to the eyes. There are conversations one after another, but every sentence is leading to questions.

What is still impressive now is the apple that fell from the fruit tree, floats and sinks with the flow of water, and finally ran aground. What the world can observe is often just stranded facts. Time has passed and the wind has blown, and the truth is not easy to find, so with various interpretations and guesses, you can know which stream it drifted from, but you may never know which fruit tree it fell from. Through this long lens, the whole film can be mapped.

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