Being abused crying and being moved to cry are not the same thing

Christy 2022-04-22 07:01:04

I saved a lot of movies to watch, but I didn’t pay attention to recent movies. Wen said that she was really moved to cry this time, not because of abuse, and she excitedly told me: "Go and see, go and see!"
So, went to see.
In fact, I don't quite agree with the male lead going back to the past to kidnap the female lead. I always feel that it is too deliberate, but it doesn't matter, that's not the point. The whole movie is still light and easy. Especially the subway section!
What really brought me to tears was when Tim was walking with his dad. When they went back in time, back when Dad was young and Tim was young, they laughed and ran down the heights holding hands. When that scene appeared, my tears flowed out uncontrollably. I can't say exactly what kind of emotion made me cry, but I know very well that I was crying and laughing, my heart didn't feel pain, and there was no obvious It is a very satisfying feeling to feel warm.
I am a guy with well-developed lacrimal glands. I tend to cry while watching a movie, but I don’t seem to have really thought about why I cried. What exactly is abuse? bad ending? Missing the two protagonists? The character's death? What will you be impressed by? Turnaround? Everyone is happy? Carefully rummage through the movies that I have watched, recall the plot, and slowly discover that being abused to cry, or being as violent as a needle, or as heavy as a rock presses on my chest, in short, my heart will hurt, but I am moved, and what sinks deep in my heart is Practical.

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Extended Reading

About Time quotes

  • [Tim and Mary are in bed]

    Mary: So not such a bad day after all?

    Tim: No. It was pretty good, really. Very good day, actually, as it turns out.

    Mary: Well, that's a relief. Because it had been a very bad day, I thought I might have had to have had sex with you to make up for it.

    [she turns the light out]

    Mary: Goodnight.

    Tim: [he is lying blatantly and Mary knows it] It was a very, very bad day. It went very badly. I got fired from my job. And then I killed a man.

    [she turns the light back on]

    Mary: That is a very bad day.

    Tim: It's terrible.

    Mary: Yeah, the worst day ever. I'm so sorry.

    [they start to make love]

  • [Mary wants another baby]

    Mary: I just thought that maybe it was time for the insurance baby.

    Tim: What?

    Mary: In case one of them is really smart. We don't want the other one to feel stupid their whole life. And if we had a third one then we could have *two* happy dummies. What do you think?

    [Tim realises that once another baby is born, he will never be able to go back to a time before that]

    Tim: [voiceover] It was the toughest decision of my life. Saying "yes" to the future meant saying "goodbye" to my dad - forever.