When I opened the credits, I was overjoyed: Sure enough, Koichi and Ryunosuke are brothers!
In the second half of the movie, when Koichi and Ryunosuke took their friends to Kumamoto to watch the Shinkansen, I always thought about the disappearance of the frog boy in South Korea, and I was afraid that the children with dreams would be caught by accident. It's over, South Korea now gives me the impression of cultural hooligans and murderous perverts.
There is almost no inherent sadness in this film, it is more about growth and expectation, which makes people feel that this is not Yuka Koeda, but the description of life is full of Yuka Koeda, and this is permeated throughout the film. The sense of hope for a better future makes people linger, as if miracles can happen at any time.
When the two trains met, everyone shouted their most sincere expectations, and Hangichi also cherished life in Kagoshima at that moment. I was thinking, if I were there, what would I wish for? When he was about the same age as Ryunosuke, every time he lost his teeth, he would wrap his teeth with a piece of white paper with a wish written on it, wrap it with transparent glue, then hold it in the palm of his hand, close his eyes, and recite the wish in his heart. Once again, he asked the Bodhisattva to help realize his wish, and finally he threw the wrapped teeth onto the roof. I vaguely remember that there was a wish to have a Digimon at that time, hahahaha. However, what do I wish for now?
Even if it doesn't come true, expect a miracle.
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