The future people go back to the past through the tunnel, how many people in this community are future people, how many people in the past are killed by the future self, what is even more frightening is that only the girl belongs to the past, and all the neighbors around her including her parents They are all in the future, and she is also taken for granted by the rhetoric they weave. She prefers future parents to the past, just because the girl in the future disappears, so the future parents know how to cherish and give her love. . Another point is that it seems that the future male protagonist and his past wife are reunited. Isn't it absurd that this kind of emotional projection is given to the closest character but not the closest person. The final result is that the whole community intends not to let the people of the past go to the future through the tunnel. This kind of collective suppression, or the constant influence of the people who are the first to return to the past from the future, is also quite terrifying. . In fact, the story is still about cherishing the people around you, through a time-travel story, but won’t the future and the past be transformed into chaos? In the past, there is also new pain entanglement, the first is to kill the past self. Even if the traces are constantly removed, the inner shadow cannot be removed. Some people go back to the past through the tunnel in order to escape crime, some people to escape pressure, some people to escape the indifference of marriage relationship, and some people to escape the pain of losing a loved one, but just like the end, the future male lead and female lead come one after another. In the past, I saw my daughter, but I also understood that this daughter is not my own daughter. She is not so close. It is a relationship that is maintained only by giving love constantly, and finally let the past self move into the future. The two future people plan to come back in the past. Well, why not start all over again in the future? I just envy the days before the Cold War, so it's better to act now.
View more about The Door reviews