The two sections that moved me the most: First, the big devil had a meal with a former friend, explaining why she had disappeared for twenty years, and her speech was extremely fast, like pressing the fast forward button, within a few minutes, twenty years had passed. Again. First, career frustration, then repeated miscarriages, and then the birth of a daughter with congenital heart disease, wasted 20 years by a series of reasons beyond my control. When I was sharpened and shaped by countless fine stones and blades, in the eyes of others, it was an embarrassing situation without shape. The second is to apply to go to the South Pole Station. The supervisor made a bunch of harsh requirements, and the eyes of the Great Devil were shining brightly. She said that I had been preparing for this moment in the past twenty years. It is not only a fascination for the creation and work that will unfold, but also a patch for the past two decades. It turned out that it was not abandoned, it was just a long preparation. This moment is extremely moving, it is self-salvation standing at the junction of the past and the future. The big devil has no present in the whole movie, she always needs to bear the present of others and her own past. But at this moment, the twenty years have meaning and shape, so she can put it down and reach a reconciliation with herself.
View more about Where'd You Go, Bernadette reviews