The Doraemon series of film and television works has accompanied generations of people, including many touching and thought-provoking works. The "Nobita's Missing Grandma", which I want to share with you today, is recognized as the most sensational and touching of all the films.
<h1>Synopsis</h1>
Nobita owns a cub that his grandmother made for him when he was three years old, and one day, Nobita's mother threw the bear in the trash as garbage while cleaning up her old belongings. Nobita is very anxious to find the bear, finds that the bear has a crack, recalls that it is a bear made and repaired by his grandmother, and suddenly has the idea of going back to the past to see his grandmother again. Doraemon uses the time machine to help Nobita return to his three-year-old time, when Grandma was still in town, would walk around the town for a day to find Nobita's favorite glutinous rice balls, would listen carefully to Nobita say some naïve words, would carry Nobita around the streets to find the fireworks he wanted most, and patiently patch the bear. Nobita saw his three-year-old self willful and crying, and felt ashamed and regretful. At dusk, the sun slanted all over the room, Grandma was sewing and mending for the bear, and Nobita finally came to Grandma, carrying a school bag, and let Grandma see what he looked like in elementary school; Grandma also said that the happiest thing he could do was to be Nobita's grandmother.

<h1>"Grandma has become what I want to be" "It's Nobita's grandmother."</h1>
The last tear point of the whole film is this sentence. Grandma is the person who knows and loves Nobita best, and she unconditionally believes in this kind child in front of her, and her greatest wish is to accompany Nobita all the time and watch him grow up slowly. Grandma's eyes are always squinted into a line, hiding infinite love and tenderness. Grandma's love for Nobita is probably difficult to describe in other words, but it is most appropriate to experience it through her monologue - "What Grandma wants to be most is Nobita's grandmother." “
When Nobita was three years old, his grandmother died. Fifth-grade Nobita misses Grandma, the one in the world who loves him the most and knows him best. Nobita is lucky that he can take the time machine back to the time when his grandmother is still there, look at her a few times, and even deliberately apologize to his grandmother for his willfulness and bad temper when he was a child, make up for years of regret, and hug her again.
Back to reality, we don't have a time machine.
<h1>The past cannot be traced, only the present. </h1>
Cartoons can be imaginative, they can achieve many of our dreams, but reality never gives us the opportunity to make up for our regrets. The past can only be the past, no matter how much you think about it, you can't recover it.
I think everyone watching this film will be touched to the softest corner of their hearts. We all have our own parents, grandparents, and these people who love us the most have left us, and some can still let us accompany and filial piety. What we cry is that in the years that cannot be recovered, we have not really understood and repaid those deep loves, and we are like Nobita when he was a child, crying, and loving against adults, but we can't go back in time, to say sorry to them who have been hurt by themselves, to make up for the regrets of the past.
The biggest enlightenment of the film is:
Cherish your time with your family, treat them well, love them, understand them, and don't wait until you grow up and become an adult and feel remorse and chagrin for some stupid things you have done in the past.