the angel said to Andrew, I am you, and everything you have is everything I am. She asked Andrew to say "I love you" to the mirror. The man in front of the mirror was so insecure at first—a failed businessman, a hapless man with debts, a bachelor who no one loved and hated himself—but he was kind, at least the angels thought. Andrew couldn't speak, he hesitated for a long time, tried many times, until he said the complete "I love you", the angel disappeared instantly, he said to himself in the mirror with tears in his eyes: "I love you, Andrew." So the angel reappeared and stroked the man's shoulder with a warm expression on his face: "I've always been by your side." In
this world, how many people who complain about their misfortune have the courage to say to themselves "I love you" "Woolen cloth? In other words, how many people really love themselves?
No matter how low you are, no matter how messed up your life is, there will always be a true self deep in your heart, and he will always accompany you through the joys and sorrows of life, never betray you. When we lose ourselves, you may have ruthlessly abandoned that self.
At the beginning, the scene where the angel appeared - a towering arch bridge over the Seine, the protagonist of the story, the man who was desperate and desperate to jump off the bridge, but inadvertently saw another beautiful and slender angel-like figure on the left. The woman also jumped down, and he jumped down to rescue her ashore. The angel asked: Why do you want to save me? The man hesitated for a while: just out of instinct, but I can't swim at all.
When you desperately want to end yourself but instinctively rescue another person in a similar situation to you, such a dramatic scene just wants to imply you: You saved yourself, man
. Angel-A, who finally fell into the Seine and became a human due to Andrew, who had found hope and love again, tried his best to stop him.
Maybe you're not pure or noble, but remember that whether you are abandoned or not, you with the real in you, are never alone.
Well, that's all I read under Luc Besson's
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