I will miss you with the rest of my life - movie [Foreigners Hotel]

Christine 2022-03-25 09:01:09

We're all getting old, and the retirement parties that other people throw for me seem to remind me that I'm useless. I knew my life was coming to an end, but I still flew thousands of miles to the place I lived 40 years ago with a heart attack that I had suffered from years old. The place we used to live in has been razed to the ground. I saw those teenagers playing baseball, and in a trance, I seemed to see you back then. I finally found you after being crowded and noisy. I come to you with guilt, you have a wife, you are no longer that handsome Indian teen, you play cards on the side of the road in cheap and simple undershirts, and I am no longer that enthusiastic british lad, I walk in a suit Not too robust either. We embrace each other under the gaze of others. I don't know how you came here all these years, I think you must hate me because I put you and your family to shame, you got kicked out, and there's nothing I can do. But you told me that you lived peacefully and happily, and you never forgot me. How much I want to tell you, i love you, and i never stoping living you. You are the one I care about day and night. We talked for a long time, and my mind was no longer imprisoned. That morning, I sat on the swing and watched the white cranes heading west. I think I can leave eventually. I can finally sleep in India, the country where we spend some quality time together. My funeral was by the lake we visited together, not a great place but our holy place.

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Extended Reading
  • Jimmie 2021-12-17 08:01:11

    It's a pity that there are a bunch of awesome actors.

  • Daphney 2021-12-17 08:01:11

    A clever metaphor for the relationship between Britain and its colony, India, is not a problem of one yang, one yin, castration and castration, but a pair of good friends who owe/ miss each other

The Best Exotic Marigold Hotel quotes

  • Evelyn: You're still here.

    Douglas Ainslie: I... I missed the plane.

    Evelyn: What about Jean?

    Douglas Ainslie: She didn't. I had... I had quite an interesting night actually. I... I met the same... um... taxi driver, but this time I let him take me to his brother's hotel, which turned out to be less of a hotel and more of a... more of a brothel really. And... and they gave... they gave me this pipe, said it was apple tobacco but that's not what they called it when I was a student, so... so I made my excuses and left. I needed time to think. This city at night is extraordinary. I think the apple tobacco helped... probably.

  • Evelyn: What's the use of a marriage when nothing is shared?