What can we do at the last moment of our lives? This is a story about the sea and life and death. A brain cancer patient, a terminal bone marrow cancer patient, met each other in the hospital. When they learned that their time was short, on a drunken night, they resolutely stole a car and went to the paradise in their hearts - the sea. However, the car was from a gang of gangsters, and there was a million dollar bill from the gangsters in the trunk. So, in this dream-seeking journey, gangsters, police, and robbery have also become part of the story. I have not seen the sea either. The imaginary sea, the sunset, may really be like a huge fireball jumping into the sea, splashing layers of huge waves. In the face of the magnificent sea, human beings, individuals, love, everything disappeared, lost their meaning, only death. Neil Gaiman, author of "American Gods," said, "Death alone is eternal." Eternity is peace, without waves, but this kind of peace and lack of waves is the use of silence to interpret his unparalleled power. When I'm old, as a person, I can see the sea, and then experience death, I think it's worth it. As a tribute to the film, a comment I wrote for Veronica Decided to Die: I didn't die, and I didn't want to die. I do not expect death to come, but I do not fear it. Life itself is an adventure, and every choice may lead me to the ultimate death. Death is the end, but I am willing to meet it in the most bizarre manner. Ich liebe dich
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