Growing up is a must-see fester

Janiya 2021-11-22 18:54:21

I like this ending very much.

Sartre, a high school student who plays with emotions, is not doing business, is slick, and cynical, always likes to take a big drink cup and sip the straw on it. After his girlfriend broke up with him because of a little misunderstanding, he was drunk and drove wildly, fell asleep in a yard, and after a hangover, he ushered in a love that changed his life.

Sartre and Amy really met when Amy found Sartre asleep on the way to deliver the newspaper. Amy and Sartre are in the same high school. Amy knows Sartre's name, but Sartre does not know her. We all seem to think that Amy and Sartre are not the same. Because Amy is different from those coquettish bitches, she is simple, beautiful, and kind. She even gets up at five o'clock every morning to help her mother deliver the newspaper without any complaints. She thinks that Amy is the Sack who just returned from the party and makes her mother easy to wrinkle. I have forgotten the trivial matter of my clothes hanging on the hangers. When Sartre gags that he knows Amy's name but hesitates to say it, Amy just smiles.

Amy is not the kind of girl who can be spotted in a crowd. She doesn’t know how to drink or dance. She doesn’t feel like she has any experience or characteristics. At first, Sartre was disdainful of admitting that she had a good feeling for Amy. Just pity her. Sartre had forgotten to have lunch with Amy, and Amy and Sartre had forgotten about joining the French Society when they had lunch.

Sartre asked Amy to help him learn geometry, and Amy readily agreed. Maybe Amy had fallen in love with this bad boy who taught her to speak dirty words and fight for the right to go to college with his mother since she met early that morning. As the contact deepened, Sartre also gradually fell in love with this tolerant girl, no In order to make his ex-girlfriend jealous and bring Amy to the party, he carefully prepared a gift for Amy, so a big person actually wrapped the gift carefully in newspaper. Amy was all in his dreams. He began to generously admit to his friends that he really liked Amy, and after a few words with Amy, he knew how beautiful she was.

After listening to Amy's vision of a good life in Philadelphia, Sartre only answered in a perfunctory manner, very good, very good. Because he is a person who thinks he has a car, a job, a beautiful woman, and some college, he doesn't want to live a positive life with Amy.

After Sartre drove for three hours to see his father, his father's tall and perfect image completely collapsed in his heart. He has been unwilling to believe that his mother's negative evaluation of his father is all true. He couldn’t accept it for a while. He felt that no one loved him. He felt that Amy’s kindness was incompatible with this situation. He said something to hurt Amy. He even pushed Amy out of the car. As a result, Amy was hit by a passing car. Got out. If this is the end, it would be too cruel. Fortunately, no.

All-inclusive Amy certainly did not blame Sartre. She just hugged Sartre and said that nothing had happened and should not affect us to go to Philadelphia. After experiencing this, Sartre matured a little bit, but did not grow up. He confessed to the boss who worked as a part-timer, and he must have been licking his tongue before. He pressed his cell phone and forgot to glance at Amy who was anxiously waiting for him to go to Philadelphia with him in the glass window of the station, and then drove away. Don't end this way, okay, no.

Sartre said that people have always wanted him to grow up, and he didn't want to grow up, but was afraid to grow up. Perhaps influenced by his parents, Sartre is very negative and pessimistic about marriage. But Amy thinks that marriage is very beautiful. She said that she will live with her husband in the horse farm in the future. She works for the Aerospace Agency. His job is completely different. In this way, they can complement each other. They have things in common, but they also have their own differences. Place, so that life will not be boring. Full of hope for life and dreaming, Amy changes Sartre, who has always been anxious. Sartre is afraid of failure, afraid to work hard, afraid of hurting others or being hurt by others, afraid of true love or hate, afraid of disappointment, afraid of taking responsibility. As Marcus commented on him, he is not a dishonest person, he is just timid. When a person grows up, it usually takes a moment. Sartre's self-closing not only isolates the pain, but also isolates all the good things. Finally, he decided to open up his heart. It turns out that growing up is really a must-see fester.

There is nothing wrong with living in the present, but in addition to the present, I must also consider tomorrow. I want to start living to the fullest. This sentence is very good, and I also give it to myself.

He drove the car and met Amy on the college campus, and Amy's face was again with that familiar smile. The good times are now, and so will the future.

The finale, I am very satisfied with this ending.

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Extended Reading

The Spectacular Now quotes

  • Sutter: You think beauty's in some classroom or some textbook, and it's not. That's not what it's about. This right here. This is beautiful. All of this. That's all you need.

  • Cassidy: But you can't go around having fun all the time. You have to be serious.

    Sutter: I am serious. I'm one hundred percent serious!

    Cassidy: About what?

    Sutter: About... *not* being serious!