I like "Her Memories" the most, especially the first time the astronauts saw the projection of the past person in that room. There was a strange sense of deja vu. I forgot to see it somewhere (I rub it! It seems to be Shining) Anyway, it has more atmosphere than the psychic I watched the night before. A large proportion of the soundtrack incorporates a soprano as the background. At the end, the lonely and dilapidated artificial celestial bodies bloom into roses in one go, which has a tragic and epic sense. In fact, the discussion of "memory" and "eternity" itself is not new, but it is a wonderful feeling to concretize it as a holographic projection.
The words "the smelliest weapon" almost seemed to have a violent attack. Why did Nobuo Tanaka realize that the problem was with him, and all the people around him had problems, but he was the only one who was targeted by the military and followed him by the poisonous mist. Choosing to take off the space suit (although the ending is tragically funny) is too stupid to bear! Having said that, in fact, the "stinkiest weapon" itself is a kind of fragrance rather than odor, and it is ultimately necessary to repay the benefits through inhumane biological and chemical weapons.
"Street of Cannons" has a satirical feel to militarism, where people and children are raised as fighting machines advocating war with little awareness of the actual meaning and suffering of war. I feel that this part has a strong comic feel.
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