Back to the movie, the former lover will see each other at other people's wedding more than ten years later, the woman remarries a cardiologist, and the girlfriend in the man's life is still a young girl in her early twenties. When they broke up, the woman left New York and went to London without saying goodbye; but for so many years, whenever a man saw a girl who looked like the heroine on the street, he still couldn't help but go up to confirm whether it was her. After more than ten years, the two who were no longer young hugged and danced like they did before, and then went upstairs to have sex. The man greedily kissed every inch of the woman's skin. Suddenly the man stopped and asked the woman distressedly, "When did you get a scar on your thigh?" The woman explained lightly, "I was accidentally hit by a car." I came back with a wound." The man's voice was somewhat choked. "You can't live like this." The woman told the man equally seriously. In a few hours, the woman will be back in London, and the most foolish audience can see it: they were in love back then, and they still feel it now. At the end of the movie, the woman is taking a shower in the bathroom, and the man listens to the woman's instructions and helps her to pack up when she is in a hurry, while talking to the woman in his heart. The woman came out of the shower and said, "What did you just say, the water was so loud that I didn't hear it." In the end, the two sat in a taxi. The whole film is narrated by split shots. There are two pictures, one is the heroine and the other is the male lead, and at the end they really separate, and the screens come together - it looks like they are sitting in the same car. In fact, two cars, two directions, two worlds.
Whether it's a movie novel or real life, perhaps a question we often ask is why people who love each other can't be together. The heroine has this line of dialogue in the movie: "People who are deeply in love are better at hurting each other." And the sentence the hero said when the heroine was taking a bath was "I love you, good or bad, please bring Let's go with it."
It seems that the lovers who fell in love with each other when they were in their prime are still missing after many years. Nothing to do with swim rings and crow's feet. It's just that what wasn't done back then won't be done now, so each has his own way, so let's do it.
View more about Conversations with Other Women reviews