Nanny McPhee said to the children - "When you need me but don't want me, then I will stay; when you want me but don't need me anymore, then I have to go." She really did what she said. At the end of the film, the children gather naughty and become polite and friendly; the father, who has just receded from the loss of his wife, finds a new true love; and the nanny McPhee, she also honorably fulfilled her mission and gave the story a A fairy tale ending. Indeed, it was time for her to leave. Maybe, she wasn't that ugly; maybe, it was our hallucinations that were funny. When her appearance gradually became more beautiful with the changes in children's behavior, it was obvious to all. However, no one burst into a huge surprise. Her changes are subtle and subtle, rising and falling because of the children's every move. Perhaps, what really changed was not her face, but how we thought of her in our hearts. Now, she is really gone. Just as she came mysteriously and suddenly, she was still wearing a veil of dreams when she left. Everything after that will be peaceful. But what about the children, what will they think? Will you be sad? Do you really need her anymore? There is no answer to this question. If a fairy tale starts from its opening to its closing, no matter how much time is wasted, how many beautiful scenes it has experienced, how many wonderful plots it has performed, it will always follow the pattern of the final ending and progress slowly. As the curtain slowly falls, all the worry-free years will fall into the darkness behind the curtain and never return. When we got up and left the auditorium and ended the observation of this fairy tale, it also meant that this child, the former child, was about to grow up. No matter who you are, you are inevitably forced to accept the same ending.
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