Holding a remote control that can control everything around you, you can pause at any time, vent your anger at our opponents, skip the process we don’t like at will, and review the scenes we have experienced at will. This feeling must be very refreshing, even when watching others It is also enjoyable for others to use. This is a gimmick used to attract audiences in the first half of the film. But in the second half, the film tells us that what looks cool is not necessarily really cool, just like what we once hoped to skip is not necessarily something we don't like. Many times, we feel that the chores of the family are holding us back, and we wish that no one or anything would disturb our work. In fact, this does not mean that we think that work is more important than family, but that work is more urgent. After the end, the boss will be killed or even fired. As for the time with the family, it will be longer in Japan. However, we were wrong, and the mistake was that no one knew which family gathering was the last. The job is endless, and if you lose your position, you can find it again, but our family is the only one for us, and it is useless to regret losing it. In order to illustrate the importance of cherishing time, someone once suggested that people live every day as their last. The same goes for family gatherings, I think.
There are two moving scenes in the film, one is the scene where the protagonist relives the last time he saw his father, and the other is his farewell to his family. The first episode had me wiping away tears several times, and the second time I watched it, I still couldn't hold back the tears. Although the second part of the plot is cliché, it is indeed sensational, and it is hard not to feel sorry for the characters in the film. I never thought I would cry watching an Adam Sandler movie. But the movie didn't end in tragedy, and if it did it wouldn't be an Adam Sandler movie.
The plot of the whole film is smooth, the dialogue is funny, and some small bridges that are not related to the theme are also very interesting. While the admonition to viewers that "Family comes first" is somewhat didactic, it's not objectionable. Our country always says that it should be entertaining, but after so many years, it was first realized by the old beauty.
In the film, after the education of facts, the protagonist understands what is the most valuable thing in life, which is a bit idealized. In reality, it is more common to heal the scar and forget the pain. How many of the steadfast determinations and vows we have made through wounds and pains are we really remember and hold on to?
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