One's childhood, the childhood of thousands of people

Arden 2022-03-04 08:01:32

To see the last unknowingly shed tears. Most of the first half is to pave the way for the next half hour.

His father was a soldier in World War I and a writer at the same time. He survived after the end of the first station, but left a deep shadow of the war. He was inspired to write a book about war, hoping to help people.

During the two weeks alone with his son, Wen Siquan wrote the story of Winnie the Bear. Winnie Bear's book was a bestseller for a while. It recorded the childhoods of many children and was an indispensable part of childhood memory.

Billy Muen grew up with Winnie the Bear, the tiggers, he is their owner, and they grew up with Muen. But when the story of Winnie the Bears exploded, Mu En’s peaceful life changed completely. He needed to cooperate with the media to accept many interviews, have afternoon tea with the Countess, and what’s more, he was asked by the director of the zoo to get close to the real thing. Bear group photo, Billy Muen doesn't like this, but also cooperates.

For a long time from childhood to youth, Billy Moon hated being called Christopher Robin very much, and had a lot of conflict with his father, who didn't realize his desire to make a profit until his nurse left. , the impact on his son, he decided to stop and never write a word about Winnie the Bear, but this did not solve the conflict between him and his son.

With the advent of World War II, the national army was recruited. Although the son was not selected by the army, he insisted on asking his father to help him join the army and fight for the country. The father was probably unable to refuse, and he fulfilled this wish and sent his son to the battlefield. But soon I received a message from the battlefield that my son was missing and may have died. After learning this news, how complicated the father's mood can be imagined, angry? Blame yourself? sad? On a calm and peaceful night, as my father stared at the stars in the sky, Billy Moon turned to the house, smiling.

The ending is very good, bringing the emotions to the highest point, the heart-warming ending, soothing my previously blocked heart.

He and his father came to the mountainside where he used to be when he was a child. He told his father that on the battlefield he heard someone singing the song of Winnie the Bear. He instantly understood the power of this story. It can give people strength on a difficult battlefield. It brings warmth to the memory of the good times of childhood. Billy Moon's childhood is very meaningful, one's childhood, the childhood of thousands of people!

His father also achieved the original intention of writing a book.

A relatively heartwarming drama, not many people watch it, but it is really a good movie.

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Extended Reading

Goodbye Christopher Robin quotes

  • Daphne Milne: You know what writing a book against war is like? It's like writing a book against Wednesdays. Wednesdays... are a fact of life, and if you don't like them, you could just stay in bed, but you can't stop them because Wednesdays are coming and if today isn't actually a Wednesday it soon will be.

  • Christopher Robin Aged 18: There it all is. Just as I left it. As if nothing had happened.

    Alan Milne: When I came back, everything seemed wrong. I didn't fit anywhere. Until I came here. Those days with you... I wanted to keep them all. Put them in a box.

    Christopher Robin Aged 18: The things that I said before I left...

    Alan Milne: They were all true. You're here. That's all that matters.

    Christopher Robin Aged 18: In the desert, we were under fire... and one of the men started singing one of the hums of Pooh. He changed the words a bit, but...

    Alan Milne: [low chuckle]

    Christopher Robin Aged 18: You know. And I thought, "How on earth do you know that song?" And then I remembered...

    Alan MilneChristopher Robin Aged 18: Everyone on earth knows that song.

    Christopher Robin Aged 18: But I knew it first. It was mine before it was anyone else's.

    Alan Milne: Then I gave it away.

    Christopher Robin Aged 18: When they were singing, they were remembering. It was like a magic charm... it took them home to a fireside and a storybook. You did that.

    Alan Milne: [inhales] Thank you. I'm sorry you paid the price for it. If I'd known, perhaps I...

    Christopher Robin Aged 18: What? Not written it? No. You reminded people what happiness was... what childhood could be when everything else was broken.

    Alan Milne: But your own childhood.

    Christopher Robin Aged 18: Was wonderful. It was growing up that was hard.

    Alan Milne: [smacks lips] Who would have guessed that bear would swallow us up?

    Christopher Robin Aged 18: Exactly. This was all ours, wasn't it? Before it was anyone else's.

    Alan Milne: Yes. And it always will be.