It's actually quite interesting. The first time I watched it, I watched it in the original order, and the second time I went back and watched it in the logical order (that is, the order that Haruhi reported in the trailer after each episode). Two mental journeys, each have their own gains. The producers did take a risk, but it was worth it. This kind of idea is probably due to the common experience of people watching TV shows that they suddenly insert in the middle and miss a few episodes from time to time, but they can always reconstruct a complete story in their minds. In fact, people who appreciate art should also be artists (even if not professional), and in fact everyone is an artist, because everyone has the instinct to appreciate art.
Perhaps, because it is so common, everyone has never thought about it: if a person has no imagination, can he appreciate art?
Same proposition: Can a person have thinking in his head if he does not know any actual language?
If you don't believe me, try to pay attention to whether your thinking is always attached to language (even if it is a messy piece of language) - that is, silently talking to yourself.
Also pay attention: appreciating art, is it always accompanied by your own reverie, even if it is a little bit, even if the art you admire makes you a headache and nausea.
This idea of Suzumiya may be the natural expression of this reverie.
By the way, there are many creative ideas that can only be used once. If there is another film like "The Joy of Summer in Suzumiya" in the future, it may be a big failure. It's not a copyright issue, but, modern creativity often comes from the most inadvertent trivial things. Once it is pointed out, "everyone on earth" will know it next time. It can only be new once, and this time it can be very new. Wonderful.
Sadly, if Shakespeare were born today, he might not be famous. Don't plagiarize too conspicuous inspiration - inspiration can only be valuable if it is your own.
Nagging is over, superfluous, arrange the logical order:
2
, 3, 5, 10, 13, 14, 4, 7, 6, 8, 1, 12, 11, 9
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