Goodbye, the me who's not mine

Timmy 2022-03-19 09:01:10

(Love Domhnall and Alex's face from start to finish) The outcome of the creation is never as important as the happy process. Accompanied by his son, the father gradually peeled off the mental torture of the aftermath of the war. Together, the father and son created a childhood story with a childlike interest. When one day these private things suddenly become household names but make the whole childhood no longer good, at the moment when they are exposed to the world, there will be growing pains, which accumulate little by little into inner resentment. I want to escape as soon as possible, so the war is in front of me, and at the moment of parting, countless grievances pour out, but this short escape is to go to the battlefield, and it is unpredictable whether I can survive. When the "Death" sent the "Death Notice", the father was in tears, and the mother cried about the cruelty of the father. The flashbacks are filled with memories of my son's childhood and his resentment and resistance when he parted. Those good old days were covered by such a haze. Fortunately, it was just a little joke from God. The "missing" son came back on that moonlit night. , Father and mother cried with joy, and finally everyone returned to their home, the warm home that never changed before and after the war, with parents who loved them and who wrote their own stories. (Noo gave Billy infinite love in his childhood, and even after he left, he still kept the stories and memories of Pooh in Billy's childhood) (This film is a bit tearful, so heart-wrenching!)

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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.