#Love in Tanabata #English movie "Heartbeat", which tells the story of a pair of young boys and girls who become self-respecting and brave because of love. It is not as superficial as the youth love films seen in the past, and it can bring people a lot of thinking. In particular, the heroine Judy's concept of love is worth learning from many girls.

Seven-year-old Judy
In 1957, at the age of seven, Judy met Bryce, a boy of the same age. Little Judy fell in love with Bryce at first sight, because his eyes were charming and "aristocratic", which made her thrilled. (Foreign children are so precocious.) In elementary school, she always loved to pestered Bryce, and Bryce even pretended to pursue other girls in order to get rid of her.
In fact, Bryce Jr. didn't like Judy
Judy's dad is a painter, and in the process of talking to dad, Judy knows a lot, such as how to look at the whole and the whole. She likes to climb the tall plane tree to look at the village, but one day the owner of the tree wants to cut it down. Judy climbed on the tree and refused to come down, she desperately guarded the tree. She called out to Bryce to come up and guard the plane tree with her, but Bryce ignored her, smiled and took the school bus away.
Judy was injured because of the Sycamore Incident. Dad painted the plane tree for Judy, and she slowly regained her spirits. She began to feel that Bryce was not a powerful friend, and apart from Bryce's charming eyes and smile, he might not have a character matching his looks.
Bryce's grandfather saw Judy, the girl next door guarding the plane tree, in the newspaper, and the old man admired Judy's personality very much, often praising Judy in front of Bryce, who was Bryce's assist in falling in love with Judy.
Judy participated in the school science and technology competition, she successfully hatched six chicks, attracted the attention of all teachers and students, and won the first prize. She worked hard every day to raise all six hens, and the hens began to lay eggs. She still regards Bryce as a good friend and often gives eggs to Bryce, but Bryce does not want to eat eggs because he has seen snakes swallow eggs raw. But he didn't say anything directly, telling his family that Judy's chicken coop was dirty. His family, worried that the eggs had Salmonella, refused to eat them and asked him to return them, and Bryce felt embarrassed and took it upon himself to dump the eggs in the trash. After pouring a few times, judy accidentally found out, Judy was very surprised, "If you don't eat it, you can tell me, Mrs. So-and-so has been spending money to buy my eggs, how can you do this?" Bryce's hypocrisy and disrespect for her and the fruits of her labor made Judy very angry. She revisited Bryce and felt that she didn't like boys like that anymore.
In fact her chicken coop was not dirty
In the evening, Blythe came out for a walk, and he said to Bryce: "As I grow, some people become mediocre; some people excel; some people are brilliant. Grandpa's subtext is that Judy is the girl who is becoming increasingly glamorous, and his grandson Bryce may become mediocre. He told Bryce "be honest" Bryce finally found the opportunity to sincerely apologize to Judy.
As he learns more about Judy, Bryce discovers that he truly falls in love with Judy. He and the Iron Brothers talk about Judy in the library, and the Iron Brothers laugh at Judy's uncle for being mentally retarded, and Bryce is angry inside, but he laughs and agrees for the sake of the face of his friends, all of which Judy hears clearly behind the back shelf. She thought Bryce was a coward, and she didn't care about him anymore.
Judy and Dad spend their birthdays with their mentally handicapped uncle
Bryce became increasingly fascinated by Judy, just as Judy was fascinated by him in elementary school, and boys were always late-maturing. There is a "basket boy" fundraiser at the school, which selects 20 outstanding boys, who stand on the stage with carefully prepared lunch baskets, and the girls bid for the opportunity to have lunch with the boy they like. Bryce, the No. 9 basket boy in 1963, hoped that Judy would bid on him, but Judy sympathized with a chubby boy who had no one to shoot bryce, which made Bryce very frustrated.
During lunch, Bryce was in no mood to pay attention to the pretty girl across from her, and had been watching Judy. Finally, he plucked up the courage to go over and forcibly kiss Judy, and Judy ran away. Bryce's iron brothers came out to persuade Bryce, and this time Bryce was not cowardly and broke off relations with the iron brother who looked down on Judy. But Judy was determined to throw Bryce out of her world, leaving him to call, knock on doors, and knock on windows. Later, Bryce's mother took the initiative to invite the Judy family to dinner, Judy did not want to go, but Judy's mother valued the opportunity to get along with the neighborhood, and was very happy to receive the invitation, she could not not go. Relieved after dinner, Judy said goodbye to Bryce.
Bryce's grandfather had the best vision
One morning, through the window, she saw Bryce digging a pit in her yard to plant a plane tree (although she didn't give it up, presumably it was grandpa who gave him the idea), and the plane tree had a special meaning for Judy, just like her plane tree had grown again, and she was willing to give Bryce a chance to start over.
The young girl Judy responds to the process of young Bryce from love to non-love, which corresponds to the sentence "Love a person begins with appearance; respect for talent; fit in character, long in kindness, and finally character". Judy, an eighth-grade girl, is mature and decisive, judging that a person is no longer as attractive as he was at the beginning, attracted by his eyes and smile alone, and she understands that a boy is important to character, at least to be honest and brave. Such a girl does not have the physique of "sucking slag", because she has judgment, can introspect and consider, and takes the initiative into her own hands. It is precisely this spiritual core that makes it stand out in many youth romance films and makes me eager to recommend it to more people.
Many girls today don't go out to work after making a boyfriend and are fully accompanied. Unfortunately, after breaking up with her boyfriend, she complained that she met scumbags, and they really should learn from Judy. Maintain the character of self-reliance, see the character of the other party and give up, respect yourself, do not cling, do not entangle, do not delay, stop loss in time, why be a complaining woman; if the other party can recognize their own shortcomings and reform, then give him another chance. The love for Judy makes the teenager Bryce brave, believing that he will grow up to be a "glorious" person with her beloved girl.