"Unfinished Business" was created by the screenwriter of "Bojack Horseman". Like Horseman, it is an adult fairy tale with "mourning" and psychedelics flowing in its blood. "Unfinished Business" uses the animation technology of live-action redrawing, which makes the picture look like a live-action drama with filters. However, the various distortions of time and space in the animation, and the overlapping of dreams and reality, like the scene of "flying big" in Ma Nan, are difficult to achieve in live-action dramas. Therefore, there will not be the feeling of "why don't I just go to the live-action drama" when watching "The Beloved Van Gogh".
The story begins when the heroine meets her dead father after a car accident. The father tells her that his death has other hidden meanings, and begins to teach her the ability to travel through time, similar to "Story of Your Life", which can make people live in the past and present at the same time. And the future, where science and witchcraft are combined, is interesting both in the setting and in the way it is presented.
But this isn't a hardcore sci-fi show. Loves to talk, can't settle down, and repeats the same mistakes every day. The label on the heroine determines that this is a typical funeral drama. After gaining the ability to travel through time, such a mourned heroine also came up with the idea of "don't want to live this kind of life anymore", wanted to find out the real cause of her father's death, and at the same time returned to the past to save her father.
However, the subsequent development of the show was very depressing. A total of 8 episodes, each 20 minutes, the screenwriter continued the style of Ma Nan, mourning everywhere, and occasional candy. If these 160 minutes were filmed as a movie, there would be no ups and downs, but as an episode, the pause in each episode was just right, and all the conflicts and foreshadowing broke out in the last episode. It really takes a while to watch it.
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