The title soundtrack has the same tone and transitions, which is comfortable.
Although the protagonist's setting is inevitably a bit hypocritical, forcing new words to express sorrow, but I totally relate to it. In adolescence, he saw through the world, and used drugs to anesthetize himself, but he believed and had sustenance naively, but it was not a complete portrayal of these extremely twisted young people.
But I am curious what new feelings and new pains such people will have when they reach middle age. After all, when they were young, they had already suffered a lot.
In the scene of riding a bicycle through the forest in the middle of the night, the corners of the girl's clothes flew up, as if they were in the air. I can imagine that the orange grove in the summer night has a dark fragrance floating, a little wet and heavy, and it won't feel sultry when riding the bike very fast, and even a little cold when the wind blows. When traveling fast, all troubles can't catch up.
Perhaps this is the only thing that young people are less fortunate than middle-aged people. Young people can play and chase on midsummer nights, and middle-aged people have to digest everything in the garage after get off work.
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