Been waiting. . .

Ray 2022-02-25 08:02:26

At the risk of wearing walnut eyes the next day, I watched this movie in the dead of night, woke up this morning and looked in the mirror, and it turned out to be walnut eyes. . .
Many people should have known the story of the loyal dog Hachiko long ago. After the owner died, a dog named Hachi was waiting for the person who would never come back every day at the gate of the station where he returned from get off work. Years are like a day, until I die. It stands to reason that this kind of movie with a well-known plot should not seem to have much feeling, but it is precisely because I know the final ending that the professor is still alive and when Ah Ba takes him to and from get off work every day, I can't hold back the tears. flow down. The more beautiful something is, the more painful it is to lose it.
Someone once told me that dogs are like children, they play like children, they think like children, and they see the world like children. For Ah Ba, the professor is just like his father. He takes care of him, loves him, plays with him, and takes him for a walk every day, and he also has his own responsibility, that is, sending the professor to the station to work every morning, and then every evening. Pick up the professor from the station. The wife said that Aba doesn't have a clock, but he always knows the time. But what is the use of knowing the time? The professor left, but he could only sit at the station gate, Ri Rikong, and wait.
I think Hachi didn't understand the fact that the professor was dead. He chased the hearse across the streets, but stopped at the station gate. Its world is only home and the station, and the roads the professor takes it for a walk. It doesn't understand where the professor is going after the station. So it runs back to Shibuya from Asakusa again and again, it wants to return to its own world, and in that world, the professor will come back. No matter where he is, he must wait at the station gate every evening, just like the day the professor died, because it is his responsibility to wait until the professor returns, and then go home together. Although the home has now changed hands, its log cabin has also been split into firewood and burned. . .
To this day, the statue of Hachi still stands at the gate of Shibuya Station, waiting for the owner who will never return. . .

Another: As a Japanese film in 1987, this film is really exquisite, and you can also see many old faces in the young age, which is worth watching.

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