On a normal weekday night, I watched a very fascinating movie, and the paradox was that it was a particularly wonderful dramatic plot, but it was actually a real documentary. After taking a bath, I was still immersed in a dramatic sigh, life is like a play, not necessarily a fairy tale.
The movie begins with the dramatic recognition of the triplets, and another double self appears in life, which not only shocked the school, but also shocked the media. Under the rush of newspaper headlines, what is even more surprising is that there is a third self. The triplet brothers who were adopted separately grew up in different families. The brothers only care about the novelty and unexpected gain after meeting; the adoptive parents are angry at the forced loss of their children. The same adoption agency deliberately separated them, and they were artificially separated. The lawsuits that the adoptive parents were expecting were miscarried again and again without anyone knowing. The three brothers were silent about their encounter, and this bizarre story was also chewed and talked about by everyone. David Bobby and Eddy also opened the triplets restaurant together, making a lot of money in the first year. But the direction of life is not as smooth as we expected, everything is beautiful. The triplets eventually separated. Because of the lost 19 years of childhood, the strong blood cannot make up for the trivialities and conflicts in life. The fairy tale ended, life began, and Eddy, the three of them, committed suicide and passed away. The story of the triplets is full of coincidences but only a prologue. A reporter found that this is actually a psychological research sample. The three brothers were intentionally raised in three different families: blue-collar, middle-class, and wealthy; while the research institute conducts regular home visits every year, watching from the perspective of God. This group of flesh and blood people who should know each other but don't know each other.
The beginning of the film shows us many similarities between triplets, like the same cigarettes, the same sports, and even the same type of girls. For a moment, I suddenly felt that the script of your life had already been written before it landed. The good news is that the triplets are married to different wives, and each wife sees her husband as the most handsome, best, and different, even if they look exactly the same. The documentary has a huge directional and inertia at the end, in order to explain why Eddie's fate is different. His middle-class father was a militarized and documented teacher, and it seemed that the father and son didn't communicate much language and the relationship seemed normal. Although David lives in the blue-collar class, he seems to have everyone's favorite enlightened father, so everything he is grateful to him stems from. Bobby kept asking why the one who left was not him and he would rather replace Eddie in the film. Eddie's father was moved and asked if he had educated him less to make Eddie embark on such a path of destiny.
I have also asked myself more than once, how did I become me. What are nature and nurture pulling together fiercely? What is the road of life paved with? The film is filled with chicken soup with positive energy, emphasizing that acquired training can change a lot. In addition, from the perspective of scientific research, is it paradoxical that so many brothers and sisters are artificially separated; is the sacrifice of that person's destiny worthwhile when human science and technology progress? Human beings are really small and great, and life is helpless and wonderful. All encounters are the only way to become each self. The song is paved in the innate, and the lyrics still have to be written the day after tomorrow...
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