Music is the only way she communicates with others. There was nothing more important in Ada's life than her nine-year-old daughter.
Daughter, piano, suitcases big and small, New Zealand's gloomy and rainy vast coast... Ida took her "dowry" and married American colonist Stuart.
Husband Stuart, a pure businessman, saw that the piano could not be moved from the coast to the house, so he abandoned it on the beach without negotiating - he foolishly missed the only chance to understand his wife's heart.
The one who really knew Ada was the native Cypress. He understood the emotions that Ada expressed with the piano on the beach, and also understood one thing - this woman would not be able to live without the piano. So Bai exchanged 80 acres of land for the piano with Stuart, with the condition that Ida go to his residence to give him piano lessons.
It is hard to find a soulmate in life. Although Bai does not have much musical training, he has really extracted the language that belongs to Ada from the music. Only he knew what the piano meant to Ada: without it, Ada would be truly dumb.
Bai falls in love with Ada, and Ada's lustful lust gets out of hand.
She no longer needs the piano as her language, because she knows that even if she can't speak, that simple and strong indigenous man will still understand her heart.
Under the punishment and obstruction of her husband, Ada agrees not to see Bai again. She handed a piano key engraved with her heart to her daughter to Bo - she would not play the piano with incomplete keys, except Bo, Ada had made up her mind not to communicate with anyone.
Stuart, who intercepted the keys from his stepdaughter, was furious. Losing his senses, he chopped off one of Ada's fingers with an axe.
Fingers are sent to Pak.
It doesn't matter... The stubborn woman knelt down in the rain, clutching her bloody wound, trembling silently.
Ironically, another man who understood Ada was actually her seemingly indifferent and selfish husband-although it was too late, he still understood the language that belonged to Ada and understood this woman's heart.
But I still remember Bai returning the piano to Ada, and the sound she played when she was sleepwalking in the middle of the night... For the first time, Stuart heard the voice from his wife's heart. At that moment, his expression was complicated: joy , Confusion, Disappointment, Jealousy of Bai...
why wasn't he the first to know about Ada! ? He had this opportunity originally... He
loved her, so he let her go.
Among the two men by Ada's side, Stuart... He is the one who doesn't understand love, and it seems that he is the one who understands love the most.
This is a joke of fate. If he could have known Ada earlier, perhaps Bo would not have appeared in Ada's love.
At the end of the film, one of Ada's souls, along with her beloved piano being swallowed up by the sea, also sank into the icy seabed.
Since then, she no longer has to use the piano as a language to express her own voice - she has found a lover who can communicate even without language. Bai made a silver finger for her, and every time the index finger tapped on the keyboard, the "click" in the middle was the sound of her love for him—or his love for her.
Is the loneliness of Ada lying quietly in the sea also silently accompanying Stuart?
I don't know, I really don't know.
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