If you are like me, attracted by this comfortable and comfortable poster, and then find the film to find out, you will find that the male protagonist in the poster is actually naked except for the coat and headphones. The theme is also far less relaxed than the poster. After reading it, it makes people think for a long time, at least for me, that is the case.
Try to organize the fragmented words in your brain.
"I used to think I was a kitten...because I'm an old-fashioned person...I like to kiss cats...that's a bloody game...that's a mystery." The film unfolds slowly as a somewhat neurotic man babbles.
The male protagonist's father is paranoid and forced, Jewish immigrant, and has a hard life in Australia with six people. What he often says to the male protagonist is "You're very lucky. You're losing. All this WIn!" He is proud of his child's piano talent, and he is hostile to everything he thinks is unfair before he officially starts his apprenticeship. Later, he was terribly afraid, afraid that the mayor or young girl who suddenly appeared around him would take away his piano boy. He even went crazy, beating the child violently, and giving out harsh words to cut off the relationship, just to prevent the child from going to further study in a distant place. He stubbornly believes that only he can understand what is best for children. He believes that if the children are confined within the boundaries that he has set, everything will be peaceful and the family will be stable. He believes that he can give the children the most, best and strongest care. But he seems to have forgotten how he grew up. The age gap between him and his children is like a gap. Although he tries his best to make up for it, he cannot ignore it. He was unable to take care of the child for the rest of his life after all.
But in the dead of night, he was full of helplessness and asked his son not to hate him, because life is cruel, and in the end everything will disappoint, and we have to continue to survive. He hopes his son will continue to love music, because music is beautiful and it will be their friend for life.
Indeed, no one loves his son as deeply as he does. Who would define the film as an inspirational film after seeing this? This is simply a very complicated movie. Just like when I grew up, I talked to Hua Mama about the time I jokingly called the "ink-colored childhood". Every day, apart from homework, it was calligraphy. Every time I looked at my deformed right hand, or listened to the joy of my classmates dancing with rubber bands outside the window, I felt in my heart. No complaints? That is certain and certain, impossible! However, later, whether I was choosing a school or working, calligraphy added something different to my resume more or less, and it also gave me a way to calm down when my mood was ups and downs, or, in my current personality The few tranquil elements are also due to the years of practice. Therefore, it seems that now, I am more grateful than complaining about Hua Ma's persistence and violence.
A parent's love for their children is perhaps the most complex emotion in the world. It is mixed with too many personal miscellaneous flavors of past and present lives, as if the children are their own afterlife, a precious time that can be relived.
At the end of the film, the male protagonist is crying like a child, or he has always been a child. After so many years of chaos, it is released at this moment, and I also cry with me.
A talented pianist in his youth, with a frown at the corners of his eyes, full of nervousness and uncertainty, but also eager to move.
"Life is an eternal adventure, and I had to be different."
I can not agree with this any more!
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