The female protagonist is terminally ill, but optimistic and optimistic, helping the depressed male protagonist regain hope for life at the last moment of her life... That's right. This is a typical healing movie routine. Basically, you can see it every year. Although you can guess the ending at the beginning, I have to say that many people have no resistance to this kind of movie. Because this kind of movie can fill in a lot of emotional scenes in the middle, and there are handsome male protagonists and beautiful female protagonists. When the audience is watching a movie, they hope that the heroine will overcome the disease and have a happy ending. Although the heroine is likely to lead the lunch box, this expectation is the driving force for most people to support this kind of movie. Having said all that, let's look at this movie. The same old story, but I can see that the director wants to make some changes, but... these changes have become the biggest failure. First, the film begins with the heroine's funeral. This setting is really awkward. A plot that can be seen at a glance. Coupled with this beginning, many fanciful viewers immediately lost the motivation to watch. There is also a strange way to die of the heroine. At the climax of this work, suddenly... the heroine was stabbed to death by a murderer? ? I used an idiom to describe it at the time and it was ridiculous. I even thought it was because the production team was underfunded and then ended it hastily. The author's original intention is to say that this method is a liberation for the heroine. But I didn't see it at all. Not telling the story well and imposing tears in such a clumsy way is unacceptable for any audience. Coupled with the stubborn entanglement of the previous heroine, in the end, she has deviated from the halo of the saintess of the heroine, but felt that she was very obscene. It is enough to be able to do that. Through this film, it also reflects the common problems of Japanese comics now. Animations like Spirited Away are indeed once in a thousand years, and more Japanese comics are going further and further on the road of deliberately catering to the audience...
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