At the beginning, the male protagonist showed himself as a bastard plus three levels. He speaks acrimoniously, acts selfishly, and is quite irritable and dissatisfied with anyone and everything. He considers himself a star (actually a shit!) When he uses the constant repetition of time to understand everything about the heroine, then Constantly changing the various mistakes in dating to create a heroine's favorite self-I agree with the heroine's last slap: what a shameless man! Life repeats the same day forever. The male lead tried and gave up; he was also active and degenerate-but every morning at 6 o'clock everything is still the same. I think the change happens at the moment when the hero gives up any shortcut to reach the heroine's heart! On the same day, the male protagonist began to work hard to reform himself: learning poetry, making ice sculptures, learning piano...More importantly, he began to change his attitude towards people and things around him. This is the most important point. Anyone who sees the acrimonious selfishness of the previous male protagonist has to stay away from him, right? Later, the hero's efforts for the old man who passed away on the side of the road really touched me: from now on, he is really serious and alive. Isn't that the case for inadvertently? When the male protagonist deliberately pursued but couldn't get the goal, but when he tried to improve and change himself little by little, the goal finally took the initiative to approach the male protagonist. the end of the end, of course it is consummation. However, this film really explains a lot of philosophy. I once saw a saying: There are 365 days in a year, but the question is, did you repeat 365 days after 365 days, or after one day?
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