For some reason, I have always seen this kind of work discussing death recently. For example, Banana Yoshimoto's "Kitchen", which has just been read, also talks about life and death from the perspective of the survivor.
Death is too heavy for me to understand. I also hope that I will never experience it.
Nicole, who is paralyzed on the other side, has never had any good feelings, but she did have a turnaround to a certain extent in this movie.
Well, this is not a film review at all. So let’s get to the main topic and post my favorite dialogue of the whole movie. That is, the dialogue between mother and daughter in the basement when sorting out Danny's belongings-the sadness about death. I think this dialogue can also be universally applied to all kinds of sorrows in life.
Personal dictation, please feel free to correct me if there are any mistakes. =v=
Becca: Did it ever go away?
Mum: No,I don't think it does,not for me,it hasn't.
It has been going on for 11 years.
It changes though.
Becca: How?
Mum : I don't know. The weight of it, I guess.
At some point, it becomes bearable.
It turns into something that you can crawl out from under.
And then you can carry it around like a brick in your pocket . And you even forget it for a while,
but then you reach in for whatever reason,and then there it is.
Oh,right,that.
It could be awful.But not all the time.
It's kind of not that you like it exactly,but it's what you've got instead . of your Son
(So), with Carry you around IT, and IT does not Go Away Which IS ...
Becca: Which IS the what?
Mum: Fine, Actually.
Who is not it, a sad beginning will always weigh you through Not angry, can't get out of it. But as time goes on, slowly, sadness becomes a brick that can be put in the pocket. In many cases, you can no longer feel his weight. Even if you touch it again inadvertently, even if you know that he has never been far away, you can accept it calmly. After all, everything is over.
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