Very fantasy

Eliane 2022-01-25 08:05:58

A national tax auditor, living a stubborn life, was going to check the account of a female bakery owner, fell in love with her at first sight, and pursued her slowly, and finally got it. In fact, it is difficult to change the original life that was unchanging, because there is always a female voice in his ear that makes him unbearable. After many consultations and investigations, he finally found that it was the voice of a female writer who was describing the life of the protagonist. And it’s not bad at all. The most terrifying thing is that he knew that he would die the next day, and it could be said to be an inevitable thing, so he took it without hesitation. He did not die for fantasy things, because the writer changed the ending. Tragedy has become a comedy, and the classics handed down cannot be made.
After all, you leave aside the novel structure of the story. It just tells a cliché. What you will do before you die. I think it means doing everything around you, your own job, and caring. Meet your friend and tell your lover to each other sincerely. In fact, it is also something you do every day.

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Extended Reading
  • Trisha 2022-03-25 09:01:06

    Very interesting movie! ~It makes me feel a little bit like the world of Truman, but there are many different places, which are relatively better~ Everyone is the protagonist in their own life, and everything happens inevitably rather than by chance. . . I like stories with similar themes lately~

  • Moshe 2022-03-25 09:01:06

    Big love Dustin Hoffman hehe~~~ Although it can be predicted, I still like this ending. If you can predict death, it will change your life for the better.

Stranger Than Fiction quotes

  • [Harold is talking with a coworker, Dave, in the IRS archives]

    Harold Crick: Dave, I'm being followed.

    Dave: [looks around] How are you being followed? You're not moving.

    Harold Crick: It's by a voice.

    Dave: What?

    Dave: I'm being followed by a woman's voice.

    Dave: Okay. What is she saying?

    Harold Crick: She... She's narrating.

    Dave: Harold. You're standing at the water cooler? What is she narrating?

    Harold Crick: I... I had to stop filing. Watch. Listen, listen.

    Kay Eiffel: [as Harold resumes filing, Kay's voice is heard - but only to Harold] The sound the paper made against the folder had the same tone as a wave scraping against sand. And when Harold thought about it, he listened to enough waves every day to constitute what he imagined to be a deep and endless ocean...

  • [to Harold during their first meeting]

    Ana Pascal: Get bent, Tax Man!

    [gets everyone else in the bakery to boo Harold]