Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Photography major - The movie plot at the moment of disappearance

The movie plot at the moment of disappearance

Beth is a mother with three children. Like all mothers in the world, she is full of love and dedication to her family. Besides taking care of the family, Beth is also a very successful photographer.

15 high school reunion, Beth took three children to the hotel where everyone gathered. In the crowded lobby of the hotel, Beth just walked away for a while and found her 3-year-old son Ben missing. Interpol sent high-level officials to understand the situation. Although all the hotels were blocked and searched one by one, Ben disappeared into the air and could not be found.

Ben's disappearance brought great changes to Beth's family. Beth has almost no feelings and sleeps all day, which makes the relationship between Beth and her husband Pat more and more tense, and Beth's eldest son Vincent is also seriously neglected by his parents.

Time flies, nine years passed quickly. Under Pat's leadership, Beth's family seems to live a normal life. Until one day, a boy named Sam knocked at the door to tidy up Beth's backyard. Sam's face is almost the same as the "Ben 12 years old forecast map" made by the police. So Beth photographed the boy and sent it to the police for processing.

After Ben disappeared for nine years, the policewoman who had been eager to help Beth came to help again, and finally confirmed that Sam was the lost class, and Beth's family was finally reunited.

Beth and Pat thought that the family's feelings would be more harmonious after getting Ben back, but they found that Ben had been thinking about his adoptive father. Because he has no impression of his family life before his disappearance, and Beth's rebellious eldest son Vincent hardly gets along with Ben, Ben's resistance to Beth's family is becoming more and more obvious, and Beth suddenly falls into a dilemma.

Although Beth had a strong need for class, she gradually realized that Vincent had closed his heart to his family because of his long-term negligence. However, Ben's desire to return to his adoptive father's house has gradually increased. At the same time, Pat also strongly and stubbornly demanded that the family must be "reunited". What should Beth do if she wants her children back and wants them to live a happy life?