The male protagonist in the film actually filmed the growth of most boys. More or less in the face of the opposite sex, sensitive, timid, forbearance, withdrawal, inferiority complex.
For example, there are obviously so many opportunities to express, deepen, and hold hands. . . But I just don't dare, I always imagine a perfect confession, and it's all in one battle, showing the boy's childishness vividly. I am always struggling with the random guessing in my heart, but I don't have the courage to express my emotions with the simplest words, and I dare not use the simplest hand in hand to express my bravery. . . .
Even 10 years later, when he became a mature man, he still habitually hides himself. Facing the lover he misses day and night, he still pretends that he forgot. Acting like he was suddenly enlightened, he really wanted to slap this cowardly look to death, but he was actually slapping his past to death.
Some people say that this movie has a bad ending, but I actually think it handled it well. The expression of a man has finally grown up. Finally brave once, and finally decisive once. He bravely chose his current position, stayed true to reality, and abandoned fantasy.
Stories are just stories. A man eventually grows up and sums up his life. The male protagonist is not abandoning his first love, but finally no longer cowardly and has his own independent personality.
But I don't know the psychological changes of the girls in the story, and most of the estimates are also speculations by the director, because the director is also a man.
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