Lee Carter is an out-and-out bad boy. He cheats teachers, beats his classmates, and steals things. Such a child's life path in the future is mostly going in and out of high walls.
Will Proudfoot is an autistic child, forced to be religious, banned from watching TV, has few friends, and will draw a whole book full of cartoons, most likely to become insane.
But luckily they have something to love, before it all gets out of hand.
Friendship in childhood is about chance encounters, just like you were kicked out of the classroom, and I was kicked out of the classroom, and then we got to know each other. (This is impossible in the adult world, because strangers are bad people.)
This chance encounter changed the lives of two people. When they met for the first time, I think most people would complain about Will. This child is obviously being tricked by the old man. Carter bullied. But at the end of the day you have to admit that if one of the two has more meaning in the life of the other, it's obviously Carter to Will.
The first time Will saw TV was thanks to Carter, and then the scarecrow came to life, and Will's exuberant imagination was able to become more unrestrained.
Carter is the public enemy of the whole school, and his only brother ignores him, but his young heart needs a spiritual support, so he reluctantly loves his brother unilaterally until Will appears. At first, Carter, who completely regarded Will as the target of his use, began to regard Will as his true friend from the time of the blood alliance after saving each other from falling into the water. So in the Flying Dog incident, he said to Will, go, don't let them see you. This is very different from Carter who lied to others and then ran away.
The ending is touching, of course, provided you try not to think about how two poor kids have the power to get the movie to show in the cinema. But everything is not important, whether it is the movie or the audience, the most important thing is that in this, the two children have found their own lives.
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