The lower part of the original book is "Comments on Fuming Syndrome". I read it specially, and the author's setting is still interesting.
The one-eyed black man and the prostitute are still together and married, have their own warm family, although life is not so glamorous. (This is unexpected, because everyone's film critics are questioning where this impossible love and warmth will go after the restoration of sight).
The Japanese couple got divorced after a short period of a year or two, because Japanese men couldn't stand the fact that their wives used to trade their bodies for food. The Japanese man despicably informed the president, saying that the heroine is the only person in the world who is not blind, which violated everyone's promise to keep secrets together. He also said that he believed that the majority of the blank votes received by the government had something to do with the female lead. The police went to investigate the Japanese wife, and the wife told the police that the heroine saved everyone and praised the heroine. (A detail of the Japanese man in the movie, the women carried the corpse back and wiped the corpse, he turned his body in the quilt and covered his head, pretending to be invisible and disgusting to escape, he really has always been a coward! )
The little boy is reunited with his mother after being adopted by a doctor couple for a period of time after regaining his sight.
There has always been a connection between these sufferers. Except for the Japanese man, everyone said that he was not very easy to get along with.
The life of the doctor and his wife was very warm and happy, but because of the whistleblower incident, the government decided to have the sniper assassinate her, so the heroine died in the end. Although it was extremely absurd, how could the referendum matter have anything to do with her, directly responsible The inspector who investigated her sympathized and understood her, but she was also killed.
This is the end.
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