moved, not about love, but family and friendship. In other words, it is pure love. The
heroine Juliet is a mother who killed her six-year-old biological son and spent 15 years in prison. When her sister greeted her with open arms, she still felt abrupt and blunt. Juliet, there is no fairy tale with this name at all; she is as maverick as she is, as cold as frost, she would rather carry all the wind, rain and ice and snow alone, rather than say a single word. What kind of helplessness it is to kill his own son, the person he loves the most. But his son was terminally ill, so he was so cruel in order to prevent him from being devastated by the disease. This is a heart-wrenching love. However, her heart died 15 years ago; the road of life has been disheartened and bleak since then. However, the greatest wonder of life is its unknown. Changes have come quietly; warm family affection, the happiness of my sister's family, the goodwill of my sister's friends, the great help of the parole officer, and a reasonable unit. . . . . Gradually melt this dead heart. . . . At the end of the movie, Juliet finally confided her feelings to her sister after being hysterical for a while, a secret that had been kept for 15 years. . . . It's raining wildly outside, but the sun will come soon, won't it?
Kristin Scott Thomas is old, but the years have made her still so charming, and every move is an attractive sight. It has nothing to do with love or age. A love that lasts forever, even if it is buried deep, is still captivating.
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