Every kind of separation that has to be separated in the world is breathtaking

Kareem 2022-03-21 09:02:30

A veteran who did not adapt to various social problems chose to take his daughter to live in seclusion in the forest. Later, he was found and brought back to the living assistance center for temporary residence. The father took the opportunity to escape with his daughter and began to live in seclusion in the forest again. The father nearly died in an accident, which brought the father and daughter back to a place where there was a crowd. When the father wanted to take his daughter to the forest again, there was a disagreement, and finally the father and daughter separated in tears! It's such a simple story, but "Leaves Falling Without Mark" handles it very charmingly! When a certain place does its best to emphasize plot twists and various reversals, European and American countries are already discussing human nature and deeper things in a relatively high proportion! Maybe that's the kind of start that movies everywhere need to go through! Like performance, there is a subtle but qualitative difference between "relaxing" and "living"! If you "pay attention" to the rich presentation of various externalizations of expressions from the beginning, it is easy to fake a perfect story, and it is difficult to truly "life-like"! If you don't believe it, you can act it out like a documentary, and you'll know the difference! And the script is also, when the writer, director, actor, and even the management tend to cater to the external slogans of the tall and big, then this area must be degenerate! PS: Every kind of separation that has to be separated in the world is breathtaking...

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Extended Reading

Leave No Trace quotes

  • Will: I'm so sorry.

    Tom: I know.

  • Tom: What's your favourite color?

    Will: What's *your* favourite color?

    Tom: Yellow.

    [They sit for a moment]

    Tom: What was my mother's favourite color?

    Will: Yellow.

    Tom: Maybe I learnt it from her. I wish I could remember her.

    Will: She'd wish for that, too.