
The main line is the story of four friends who go together to find the body of a missing child on the last holiday of elementary school. The bad boys and freaks in the eyes of others are actually good and innocent in nature. The differences in their respective family environments have created different personalities for each child, and the image of each character is three-dimensional and rich, which is worth savoring. My favorite is the child Chambers, brave and sincere, and the role of the big brother in this small team. He rescued Teddy, who was suicidal, fearing that he would not live to be twenty years old. Enlighten Gaudy cherishes his writing talent and cannot give up going to a good school in order to be with friends. This passage is really touching: "I really wish I were your father, so that you wouldn't say you were going to technical school like me." God has given you a gift, and you are very good at telling stories. It says, "Our gift to you, child, should be cherished." "But unless someone looks after him, it's easy for a child to lose his gift." If your parents can't do it, it's up to me. "Isn't it a very wise little friend!" True friends always want you better. Growing up, Gauty became a writer, and his friends were instrumental. Of course, chambers and Gaudy's influence is two-way, and Gaudy encourages him to continue school together, although Chambers's path to education is bumpy, but also out of town and eventually become a lawyer. Unfortunately, his accidental death is uncomfortable. The gentle little fat Bourne should be happy to marry and have children according to the rules. Teddy was bent on becoming a soldier, like his adored father, even though his father had hurt his ear with mental problems. Repeatedly signed up to join the army due to myopia and ears were repeatedly rejected, and then took a crooked road to prison, and after coming out, he could only work odd jobs for a living. I wonder if Chambers and Gaudy had been by Teddy's side, he certainly wouldn't have ended up that way. There is a scene in the film where Chambers is threatened with death by the little gangster, and Teddy, who is standing next to him, runs away at the last minute, and it is Gaudy who steps forward to save the situation. Teddy must have felt guilty after that, and the difference in each other's schools gradually drifted away. It is difficult for his extreme personality to make such positive friends again. If this film were to be expanded into a TV series, it would be popular. After watching a movie or a TV series, there are sometimes sighs and sighs, and sometimes there is a sense of emptiness. Here's a little talk, small talk. Nothing literary, Mo Spray Ah [cute]