I especially like family movies. Quite strange, obviously my value order is friendship, love, family. May always feel indebted.
A lot of people compare this movie to "Floridaland," and I especially hate "Floridaland." I feel like the director is trying to be a cool bystander and blurs the line between sympathy and criticism. Although LaBeouf's own script is young, the emotional concentration of his personal experience is different. And his own role as a father is to try to lead the audience and himself to go into his father's heart and rearrange his memories. I don't know why, but I felt a greater sense of compassion. A psychiatrist is by no means the best person to help you forget. She always forces you to recall over and over again what makes you angry and what makes you miserable. However, if people are willing to take the initiative to think about their own pain, it is possible that no one will get sick. The most moving part of the whole film is that the young otis cried and said to the psychiatrist: "Pain is the only thing my father left me, and you will take this away." He knows what the source of pain is, but Still hold on tight and don't let go.
LaBeouf became famous as a teenager, and like Ding Ri next door, he also experienced moments of loss and blackmail. But I never hated him. My liking for people relies on instinct, and my instinct is particularly good at catching other people's distress signals. The next time I saw him after Transformers, it was a real dick in "Woman Addict." It was very mysterious, and his pain came to his face. Just like rick's joking mantra, silently calling for help.
At the end of the movie, Otis approached his father in a dream. He said, I'm going to make a movie about you, and LaBeouf's father replied with a smile: "Really? That makes me look handsome." At that moment, I felt that LaBeouf finally played his own father, Found reconciliation in myself.
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