The heroine doesn't just want love without a mother, people are very rational

Brady 2022-03-23 09:02:34

The time and space that the heroine jumped to later is indeed not her own time and space. She can never find a sense of belonging in this time and space (memory and experience will shape her current self, and the memories she retains in this time and space have nothing to do with her) , her choice of return is not wrong.

Of course, the emphasis on love choices is to make young people happy (after all, the audience is limited by default), which is understandable.

In fact, when the heroine was about to leave and went to apologize to her best friend, and found out that her best friend was actually a green tea bitch who ate it, if she decided to return to the previous time and space just because she was greedy for the male lead, she would be able to make the male lead. The Lord grabbed it back, rather than resolutely returning to his own time and space.

The reason why she chose to go back is actually just because this time and space does not belong to her, and her decision to return was not made just because of the male protagonist.

Of course, in the end, the two couldn't help hugging and kissing (or the male protagonist took the initiative), just to tell us that they were a natural couple, and naturally attracted, not just because the female protagonist fell in love with the male protagonist. Think about it, in the first part, basically, the female protagonist is active, and the male protagonist is passive.

PS: After a lot of brushing, I found that this piece of bad damage is a lot, hey, I can't stand it, so I changed it to four stars, after all, it's pretty cool to watch.

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Extended Reading

Happy Death Day 2U quotes

  • Ryan Phan: Great. I have to manually re-enter all this code.

    Tree Gelbman: Okay, how long?

    Ryan Phan: Six, seven hours.

    Tree Gelbman: Ryan, look at me. I am on borrowed time here. Understand? Get it done.

    Ryan Phan: Uh, yeah, I'm on it.

    [Tree leaves. Carter runs after her]

    Carter Davis: Tree, wait up.

    [Tree continues walking away]

    Carter Davis: Hey. Are you sure about this?

    Tree Gelbman: Of course I'm sure.

    Carter Davis: Okay, well, what about the killer?

    [Tree stops]

    Carter Davis: I mean, you said people are gonna die tonight. If you close the loop and we don't help, then they're dead for good, aren't they?

    Tree Gelbman: [firmly] I have to stay alive. I can't go back to that hospital. It's way too risky.

    [Tree starts walking away]

    Carter Davis: Okay, so that's it? You're just gonna walk away and let a bunch of innocent people die?

    [Tree stops and returns to face Carter]

    Tree Gelbman: People die every day, Carter. I can't be responsible for everyone, okay? I know how selfish that sounds, but it's true.

    Carter Davis: [disdainfully] Yeah, no, that sounds incredibly selfish. Are you serious?

    Tree Gelbman: [shakes her head tearfully] That's not fair. You have no idea how hard this is for me. I don't want to have to choose between you and my mom, but I have to.

    Carter Davis: What do you mean, "choose"?

    [Tree hesisates for a moment]

    Tree Gelbman: Carter, we're together in the other dimension.

    [Carter gapes]

    Tree Gelbman: I woke up in your bed every morning, just like this morning. I did it over and over and over again until I fell in love with you. But that version of us is back there, and my mom is alive here. So I've made my decision.

    Carter Davis: Wh... what if you're wrong? Huh? What if you're wrong? What if this isn't the life that you're-you're supposed to have?

    Tree Gelbman: So, what? I'm just supposed to go back to some dimension where my mom's dead?

    [Tree shakes her head, choked by tears]

    Tree Gelbman: I can't. I can't lose her again.

    Carter Davis: [quietly] You already did. And none of this is real if it erases that. You're just... you're living someone else's life that doesn't belong to you. Y-Your pain, th-that loss, that's... that's what makes you you. But you have the chance to do something other people only dream of.

    Tree Gelbman: What?

    Carter Davis: You can say goodbye.

    [before Tree can answer, they hear Danielle calling Carter "Yoo-hoo!". She approaches]

    Tree Gelbman: Your girlfriend's calling you. Better go.

    [Tree walks away]

    Danielle Bouseman: What's her problem? She just ditched our house meeting.

    [Carter does not answer. His eyes are fixed on Tree, as she getting further from them. Danielle notices that and snaps her fingers before his face]

    Danielle Bouseman: Hello? What were you guys talking about?

    Carter Davis: [lies] Nothing. We were just... we were going over school stuff.

  • [Tree is sitting in her parents' car. They drive away from the campos. Tree feels gloomy. She has second thoughts about her decision to stay in this dimension]

    Julie Gelbman: [turns to Tree] Hey. You know what I'm craving right now?

    Tree Gelbman: What?

    Julie Gelbman: One of those giant cinnamon rolls from that bakery in Morro Bay.

    [Tree looks puzzled, since she does not remember anything like that]

    Julie Gelbman: From our birthday last year. You don't remember? You ate two of them.

    Tree Gelbman: [whispers] That wasn't me.

    [Tree realizes Carter was right; she does not belong to this dimension]