Daybreak Station Music: Candy_Wind - Daybreak Station
This movie is the second brush after years, and there are some details that were not noticed on the first pass. The use of flashbacks and interludes makes the story have a confusing smoke effect. The rhythm is really slow, and some shots seem to be still, but it is under such shots that emotions have room to reverberate and increase, and gradually reach the highest point.
This is an old-fashioned plot story of "Human and Ghost Love", and it is in many superstitions that the brilliance of human civilization has been passed down.
When material civilization ends, what will it be like? Does the expansion of the universe have no boundaries? If there is a boundary, what is outside the boundary? There are too many questions and still no answers. such as emotional issues. There are many variables in this problem, and it is constantly changing, the more the quantity of conditions is generated over time.
I originally liked this kind of slow narrative story, but for some reason, I couldn't bear to fast-forward for this one. I thought it was a freeze-frame depiction at the beginning of the long shot. The years back made me understand, and suddenly my head was smashed, oh, so you want to tell stories like this. Feeling the shadow of a hundred years of loneliness, the lonely soul in the house wanders outside the Three Realms, just like exploring the emptiness and nothingness of the universe at the wine table.
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