Well, I admit, I was moved...

Ana 2021-10-20 17:23:13

I am a game lover, so I once imagined whether life can be saved and loaded like a game. In that case, can we do everything well and make ourselves happy? Compared with the core prop of this film-the remote control, my idea may be more exaggerated, because we can go back and rework what we haven't done well through save and load, and the remote control in the movie just gives you a positioning control. , What you do is either go back to the past as an audience or fast-forward to the next coordinate in your life, and the ultimate of fast-forward is to jump in. The movie is developed with such an interesting prop... The

last few days are really interesting , I actually shed tears in two consecutive comedies, one is Jackie Chan’s "Baby Project" and the other is this "click". Perhaps for those of us who are a little older, these two films have a unique penetrating power.

"Click", from the English word, click also means click. Just like when we press the mouse, the pronunciation feels very crisp and refreshing. The feeling of tapping down makes people feel that this is an insignificant action. At the beginning of the movie, Mike did it in this way, and we enjoyed it in this way, and subconsciously felt that way-unhappy times should be fast forward, sounds that do not want to hear should be muted, and unwanted experiences should be skipped... …

Gradually, I began to understand, behind the click, what it represents, represents evasion, represents cowardice, represents renunciation, represents departure from responsibility! Each click of Mike is actually a choice of life coordinates. He always actively chooses negative. He thinks he is a swan with a long neck and chooses to turn him into an ostrich with his head buried in the soil. The film begins to show step by step because of the smallness at the beginning The huge consequences of avoiding life links are of course very serious, so we see Mike and grow old in a flash, watching him from a sudden realization to a complete realization, watching him finally understand the ultimate thing in life, even though he is "dead." Go, but if you hear it, you can die in the evening!

When he is about to die, he tries to tell his son who is repeating the same mistake-family got first!
Before he died, he handed the treasured tissue to his wife who had left him-love u, forever...
He looked at the old father and said softly-I love u
hugged his mother at the son's wedding banquet, and kissed gently...

scene after scene made me really moved, or shocked.

Mike is actually an ordinary person. In reality, most of us are also ordinary people. We are more or less repeating similar trajectories with Mike or holding the concept of being close to Mike. The difference is that we are very Fortunately, without that magical remote control, our life is still in our own hands, and we are still making choices and decisions for ourselves. What Michael’s experience tells us is that life is inherently ups and downs, and life is inherently ups and downs. Downstream and adversity, we should all experience, experience, overcome, and grow, so that this life will not be in vain.

Moreover, when we are growing up and experiencing things, we put aside the drunken fans and the hustle and bustle of the world, we ask our own souls, why do things? What is more important? How can it be more worthwhile? Who loves you? Those people are going to love? Who should I love? ……Torture the depths of your heart to get the answer!

The last thing I want to say is that the magical click in the movie, I really really don’t want to have you, but... Thank you!

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Extended Reading

Click quotes

  • Kirsten: Do you need something, Mr. Newman?

    Michael Newman: Who are you?

    Kirsten: Kirsten... your assistant?

    Michael Newman: Wha- Wha- What happen to Alice?

    Kirsten: She moved to Accounting, couldn't handle your hours.

    Kirsten: [Whispering] And she prefers to be called Allen now, remember?

    Kirsten: [points at Alice, she is now a he]

    Michael Newman: No... No! No!

  • Morty: Think about it, you've skipped a year. That's a lot of sex. That's like, thirty minutes worth for you.