Happiness is a sacrifice

Charlie 2022-04-23 07:06:24

I've been thinking about life and death all the time in my recent life. It's Hiroeda and I'm anxious. I shouldn't be a bad actor, but I've automatically brought in the male lead. I'm just as old as I am. I don't have anything. Life is like a mirror to see my present, past and future. If this goes on, I will grow old disgustingly to cater to life with a shameless smile and burn myself with a lofty and arrogant...

On a typhoon night, the man's son and his ex-wife went to the park where his father climbed together. The ex-wife said she hoped that her son would be a hard-working person in the future. Only a mother at the bottom of the valley will give me this kind of tenderness and care, but I would rather not have this kind of regret and misery. It is too bad. I would rather take the initiative to love and fight for it!

Dedicated to you who have nothing to grow old soon!

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Extended Reading
  • Blake 2022-04-14 09:01:07

    It's really too Yukazu-eda. It is still the gentle and elegant style, permeated with nuanced humanistic care. Year after year, it is Hirokazu Koreeda who always uses his gentle lens to tell us the meaning of home, the weight of our loved ones, and the value of life. The unwavering flow of feelings can always make the person who likes it full of emotion and can't put it down.

  • Ashleigh 2022-04-17 09:01:13

    With this movie, 2017 entered 2017 with the sound of fireworks all over the city. 2016 was an ordinary but extraordinary year, like a storm. However, we always have to move on and learn to reconcile with the past, so that we can have the capacity to embrace new experiences. With gratitude, I wish all my beloved neighbors a happy and happy 2017!

After the Storm quotes

  • Shinoda Yoshiko: I wonder why it is that men can't love the present. Either they just keep chasing whatever it is they've lost... or they keep dreaming beyond their reach.

  • Shinoda Ryôta: The lottery isn't gambling.

    Shiraishi Kyôko: Of course it is.

    Shinoda Ryôta: No, it is not.

    Shiraishi Kyôko: What is it, then?

    Shinoda Ryôta: It's a dream. A dream you buy for 300 Yen.