The noisy restaurant was deserted, Susan left alone in the restaurant and waited alone, and the movie ended slowly. There is so much to say, but it seems impossible to start. I just remember Susan's delicate, poignantly sad eyes, and even after the movie ended, I couldn't help but wonder how sad and sad that night of waiting alone would have been for her. Many times, the source of human grief can be attributed to the fact that we can never go back to the past. When Susan really realized her heart, realized the person she really loved, the life she loved, she had lost it forever. She lost her ex-husband Tony, who loved her deeply. The old days will never go back. Because this is life, it's not like a pencil, when you make a mistake and regret it, you can erase it and start over. Tony's book to Susan, I don't think it's revenge, but he's writing his own grief, anger and reconciliation. But he wrote that he was done saying goodbye to his old self when he died dragging his necklace on a barren Texas meadow. And that means Susan has lost him forever. The story is fascinating. The interweaving of the virtual and the real tells the delicate and deep love and sadness. This is the best love movie I've seen this year.
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Nocturnal Animals reviews