Love is a real luxury in life, and it requires enough luck and wisdom to grasp it. It prefers younger customers. The older you are, the more elusive love becomes. The male and female protagonists in the film are both divorced. This seemingly comfortable figure actually bears the burden of life and family, the burden of inner pain and fear. Therefore, when love is patronizing, this figure can't help but appear clumsy and ridiculous, nervous and helpless. Most of the film's comedy comes from this sense of clumsiness and helplessness, but when they can't help laughing, everyone realizes that their laughter is also self-deprecating: this is not life! This is not me! The two protagonists interpret the feeling of love in a delicate and precise manner, which makes people feel sympathetic and can't stop! This feeling finally made the two in the film put down their bodies and concerns and reunited. The end of the comedy is also reminiscent of the old saying: love is never having to say sorry.
See the one word "charming middle-agedness," which is apt in the review of the film. Life (movie) is lively and predictable, really needless to say.
Interlude advertisement: If you are thirty plus, if you have to work to raise a child, if you have been abandoned by your youth but have not been entrusted by your children, no matter if you have a wife or not, "No Need to Say" will call you home to watch Movie!
View more about Enough Said reviews