Yes, it is indeed very sad, but unfortunately it is not beautiful, that is a kind of cruelty.
If I were the author, I don't think I would give Jackie such an ending.
Behind the splendor is such a shocking void and displacement.
At first, I was also angry because of her ignorance, her unreasonable demands, and her unreasonableness. I thought this should not be something a sister should do to her sister.
But I forgot, there was only Hilary in her life besides the cello.
When Hilary told her that she was going to marry Kiffer, Jackie's objection was just that a child suddenly lost her dependence, and she suddenly felt abandoned again, Hilary No longer belongs to her alone.
So she decided to use marriage to solve the problem. She thought that after getting married, she would not be alone, and she would also get love.
Indeed, she got it, but the love she got was completely different from the kind of love her brother-in-law showed to her sister.
"Without the cello, do you still love me?"
Unfortunately, she didn't get the answer she wanted.
The glory of a woman, in the final analysis, is only love.
Ambilight is on its surface, and fanaticism is in it. Chasing glory with death, exhausting everything, and dying.
Cinderella also paid a price for wearing the crystal slipper, but she only wanted to get love
. She was lonelier than fireworks. Even if she was displaced, she only wanted to find true love and fill the void in her heart.
Stage, applause, "Davidoff", husband... "It will give you the world", when her teacher told her this sentence, she thought she could really have the world, but she went crazy because of it.
Those honors finally became her burden, and she lost the most ordinary love while possessing the whole world.
At this time, the only thing she could think of was her sister Hilary, who abandoned everything and came to the farm with her cello, but made an almost unreasonable request. She doesn't want to spoil. She just wants to be loved.
to be loved.
Her sister's love and love indulged her infinitely. At this moment, Jackie, who was almost crazy, could only use the cello to vent her inner emotions, but who really understood her?
In the end, she finally ushered in her end - death. At that moment, the world outside the door was still noisy.
A door separates life and death.
Fortunately, at the end of her life, she was not in pain, she had memories only with her sister, and her long wandering heart finally found a home.
At the end of the film, the childhood she and the adult her meet at the seaside, life and death are vicissitudes. She said to her: Don't worry, everything will pass.
All love and hate, just this sentence, will instantly vanish. A word of enmity.
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