It’s very important to have a good parent, suitable for people with 30+ babies, it’s more substituting

Jacklyn 2022-01-19 08:02:51

I watched both versions of him&her, the former has a more complete narrative, and the latter has a stronger mood.

It's very delicate, but the rhythm is a little bit slow. The hero and the heroine interpret the emotions of 7 years in their thirties and the pain of bereavement very well. This film may not be easy to have a sense of substitution when you are not married + when you have children, especially After having children and raising them for a period of time, I can deeply understand the feeling of the protagonist's huge pain, which tears the relationship between the two people into deformation.

On the eve of his moving house, Yimei in him stayed for a while and moved out the child’s relics little by little, but tears couldn’t help but fell; there was a couple sitting opposite each other and said: I miss him and him so much. When the impression of "is getting blurred, this kind of sad emotion of being a parent but fragile and weak overflows the screen and drowns the self outside the screen. It's really worth watching, suitable for 30+ people who have been married for a few years and have children, full of powerless, cruel and difficult real life.

Ps: It is important to have a good parent. The heroine and heroine can't see where they come from, but they have been living without embarrassment. They have to say that they have benefited from the parents of the high-end restaurant owner and university professor.

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The Disappearance of Eleanor Rigby: Him quotes

  • Conor Ludlow: I, uh, forfeited the loan the bank gave me, I'm losing the lease on my bar... Eleanor's gone... with the fucking wind. I'm 33 years old, and my life's a fucking boat wreck.

    Spencer Ludlow: I'm in my 60s. I lost a grandson this year that I'm basically forbidden to talk about, my third wife just walked out on me, and I come here every afternoon to this restaurant named after your mother.

  • Eleanor Rigby: I love you.

    Conor Ludlow: I know.