deja vu

Shanna 2022-03-20 09:02:25

This is the name of the theme music in the old movie "Seventy Years of Time".

This movie is about a certain day in an unknown year and month, a young man meets an old woman, the woman gives him a pocket watch and tells him that he must come to her.

Probably this was fate. The man finally found out that this old woman should have had an unforgettable love affair with him. He followed the footsteps of fate, and the time flow came to 70 years ago. At that time, the old woman was still young. , beautiful as a flower, he fell in love with him as soon as he saw her. He should have known that this was fate, but he still wanted to love it, with a happy smile on his face, God, he loved this fate, this love that staggered time and space.

But how could he resist this fate? After all, he returned to 70 years later. His face was old and Yiren had passed away, but he was still young and full of vitality. How should he spend this lonely life? All he had to do was follow the love, yes, he followed the love.

There are many love stories about the passage of time, and the plot of this book is not unique, but the whole filming is hazy, as if it has always been in the fog, the man seems to have been searching in the fog, what he is looking for what is it then? Is it a lover? Or love? Or, his pursuit is actually like this fog, which cannot be seen clearly.

This movie is not particularly sad, only at the end, when the subtitles appear, it makes people sigh softly from the bottom of their hearts: Alas...

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Extended Reading

Somewhere in Time quotes

  • Richard Collier: Please, don't leave. You have no idea how far I've come to be with you.

  • Richard Collier: Arthur, you know in the Hall of History, there's a photograph, a young woman. There's no nameplate.

    Arthur Biehl: Yes, that's Elise McKenna. She was a famous actress in her day. Starred in a play in the hotel theater.

    Richard Collier: I-I'm sorry. Did you say there was a theater here?

    Arthur Biehl: Yes. Down by the lake.

    Richard Collier: Really? When was this play done?

    Arthur Biehl: 1912.