1.
What Mic said to his screenwriting students with the binoculars. He said: When you are young, your life is a short-sighted mirror, and the future is within your reach; when you are old, your life is a far-sighted mirror, how far the past is from you. In fact, the opposite is also true. When you are young, the past is far away from you; when you are old, the future is within your reach.
The advantage of being young is that when your heart is higher than the sky, you don't need to consider whether your life is as thin as paper. You have time and opportunity to fight and gain, as if through hard work, you can gain a world, and the future of your heart is at hand. As for the past, let him drift away like the wind. The young man does not know the taste of sorrow. What he values is the future rather than the past. The past has passed.
The sadness of an elderly person lies in the fact that his past has truly left him. He is no longer able to choose to forget the past like a young man. The future is an experience that can be anticipated and attainable at the fingertips of a finger, and that experience is death.
So how good is it to be young? Fortunately, it can take the initiative to choose, can control life. And getting old means that you have less and less time for yourself. If you are still an ambitious person, it is even more hopeless. Keeping the blood surging and the childlike innocence intact can certainly make your old age more comfortable, but really, there are many restrictions.
When I was in high school, I read Froster's poem "Two Roads from the Woods" for the first time, and it seemed to be the verse of my life. "There are two roads in the jungle, and I chose the one less traveled, which has determined the road of my life." I am very grateful to my former self, and I chose the road less travelled with a childish face and full of courage, not for anything else, but to make the old me not regret being young.
two,
Mic and Fred have been friends since they were young. They once liked a girl together, but they didn't get her because of coincidence. The elderly two were on vacation at a hotel on top of a snow-capped mountain in Switzerland, when a young man passed by on a bicycle with a rear wheel. Mic talked to Fred about his first cycling experience, which he said was an unforgettable experience. Fred laughs at him and falls off his bike after the memorable scene. Mic hehe smiled noncommittally.
A few days later, the young Mic jumped out of the hotel window and committed suicide because the actress rejected his new play. Fred learns from Mic's entourage the true meaning of that cyclist. It turned out that Mic's so-called cycling was actually the moment when he shook hands with the girl for the first time. He said that when he touched the girl's hand, he felt so happy and unforgettable. After hearing this, Fred burst into tears.
This little tidbit is truly unforgettable. I remember in Guilt Trip, in the middle of the movie, Barbara introduced to her son that she didn't know whether her former lover remembered her name for so many years, and she seemed to be uneasy. At the end of the movie, the two arrive at their former lover's house, only to find that he has long since passed away, leaving only a pair of children. It was the son who opened the door, but he said he had not heard anything about her from his father. When they greeted each other politely and disappointedly and were about to leave, the daughter went home and introduced herself to the two of them, Barbara—whose name was exactly Barbara's. It turned out that her former lover never forgot her, and even commemorated her with her own daughter. What a blessing and miss!
Throughout the two films, in fact, they all use such tricks to make the audience burst into tears. A small detail makes the audience produce a superficial image, and then the film enters other plots. During this process, our audience It seems to have forgotten its existence, and then at the end of the film, through the past few decades, we see the true meaning behind this small detail, its true meaning is full of the highest forms of human emotion: about love, About family, about friendship. It is this scene that is the finishing touch. Such an emotion travels through time, through the dramatic ups and downs, and is sublimated to the greatest extent, and makes the audience instantly moved and remembered this moment.
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