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The legend of his lifelong wandering: reliving the movie perception of "The Pianist of the Sea"

author:Sweet plum wine
The legend of his lifelong wandering: reliving the movie perception of "The Pianist of the Sea"

Last night, before going to bed, when I was sorting out the book list, I saw the movie "The Pianist of the Sea", and I remembered that the first time I was amazed by this movie was 7 years ago, and I didn't know if I could feel different from the past when I watched it again, so I decided to relive this classic again.

The Pianist at Sea is a classic by giuseppe Tornatore, released in 1998 and enduring to this day. The film is about an orphan abandoned in first class on a 1900 search cruise ship and raised by the ship's coal workers and sailors, named 1900. He was a piano genius who never got off a ship in his life, but became a legend.

On this cruise ship, he has relatives and friends, can play music freely, fight with the father of the piano, Jelly, his talent and skill can be amazing, and he has a simple and fiery love on the side of the ship. When he was finally willing to get off the boat to find the girl for love, he faced the endless city and street in front of him, but he fell into deep confusion and fear, so that he had to make a new choice to face his heart.

Seven years ago, I was only amazed at the perfect combination of character writing, romantic music and art and ideological connotations in the film, and even lamented why my friend Max could not persuade him to get off the ship in 1900 when the ship was about to be abandoned and about to be blown up.

Revisiting the film at this moment, seeing 1900's final conversation with Max in a dilapidated cabin says, "I can never give up this ship, but fortunately, I can give up my life." "At this moment, Max read him and let us read him.

For 1900, no matter how good the world on land was, he could not see the end and the meaning of life. This cruise ship is the cradle of his life, the mother of his life, and the grave of his life. The wandering of our whole life is, for him, the true meaning of life.

The world and time are infinite, but each of our lives is like the 88 keys of the piano, and our lifelong lesson is to compose infinite movements in a finite number of keys.

Other people's mirages are not necessarily what we want, as long as we keep our hearts and use our body, mind and soul to irrigate them, we will eventually get valuable gains. I hope that we can be touched by our every effort and every sublimation and walk our own life well.

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