When I read the introduction, I thought it was about a romantic story about a couple who went on a trip to pass the weekend, but it happened to happen on a rainy day. It turned out that although the heroine needed to go to Manhattan for an interview, the hero suggested that he could follow In the past, and then take her to a hotel with a view of the park, to a restaurant with good piano music, and so on. Not quite like a professional reporter, after all, I kept staring at her from the beginning and didn't see her take out her pen, and as she communicated with the director, I felt that the director was obviously more interested in her, and she was introducing herself. When I watched a lot of movies, I also mentioned European movies, Kurosawa Akira (I felt quite strange at the time, but I may not have enough literary literacy, so I didn't make it clear, just secretly guessed whether it was actually Japan. Yes? Later an audience mentioned that there is a problem with the obvious logic here hhhh) and I think the development of the whole story seems to be a little disordered, but it follows the logic, I guess it is because I watch this kind of thing less often Literary films, or lack of empathy for American culture, in short, I always find it very strange in some places and as the audience said, the heroine is really easy to get on, how can I trust a director, an editor, a film An actor can fall in love with her in less than a day, but the heroine has fallen. What's more, she can still find the hero when she is finally down, and said she will explain it the next day. At the beginning, I always said the wrong location for the male protagonist, but in the end I was able to find the male protagonist. This is also quite unclear to me. Was it mentioned at the beginning or something else? And a lyric mentioned when sitting in the carriage behind, the heroine confidently said that Shakespeare said it, and she was beaten in the face by the hero in the next second. At the same time, the hero was unwilling to continue like this, because they really very different. So I feel that the fit of the spiritual realm is also quite important, the so-called unity of three views. But I don’t really understand the male lead and the female partner. I can only see some sparks in the exchange, but I don’t know there is an agreement?
View more about A Rainy Day in New York reviews