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Norwegian Wood Who likes loneliness but doesn't like disappointment?

Rain all over the world falls on lawns all over the world, and people are worried that it is not worth their suffering.

These classic sentences, all from Haruki Murakami's masterpiece Norwegian Forest, have been active in many youth literature.

In fact, this work was shot as early as 20 10. The film Norwegian Forest can be said to be a very good restoration of the original work. Although due to the limited time, I lack some sense of wholeness, but I still grasp the essence to interpret this story, that is, the kind of idle, long and thick breath, but I can't stop.

Norwegian Forest was directed by Chen Yingxiong, written by Haruki Murakami himself and starring Matsuyama Kenichi, Rinko Kikuchi and Mizuhara Kiko.

Published on 20 10. The film tells the love-hate entanglement between college students Watanabe and Naoko and Lvzi. 20 1 1 won the Best Photography Award in the 5th Asian Film Awards and was shortlisted for the Golden Lion Award in the 67th Venice Film Festival.

The protagonist Watanabe took the shadow of his friend Muyue's suicide. After graduating from high school, he entered a university in Tokyo and started a new life in a strange city. However, he could not get rid of the shadow of his friend's suicide, and he always felt that something was missing in his life.

Until one day, Watanabe and Muyue's ex-girlfriend Naoko met, and they were also good friends. Two people in the same boat are getting closer and closer.

In their memory, Muyue is an unavoidable topic, but they didn't mention this person like an appointment. Watanabe gradually fell in love with Naoko. On Naoko's twentieth birthday, they were very enthusiastic.

However, the deeper Watanabe's feelings, the stronger Naoko's sense of fear and loss. In the end, Naoko left without saying goodbye, lived in a sanatorium in Kyoto, disappeared from Watanabe's life again, and Watanabe's life seemed to be calm again.

But then he met Lvzi in college, a lovely girl like a small animal in spring. In their growing relationship, his heart was filled with guilt for hurting Naoko until he received a letter from Naoko that he was going to Kyoto.

What choice should we make between reality and nothingness?

Norwegian Forest is adapted from Haruki Murakami's novel of the same name. Murakami's outlook on life seems to be binary, and he gives similar choices in many works. Naoko in the play represents a pessimistic and nihilistic life. Green children represent an optimistic and strong life. Most people may affirm the latter and deny the former. But he didn't. As a talented author, he just presents, does not make comments, just describes, does not make judgments. Because he knows that the world is pluralistic and there is no absolute boundary between right and wrong.

Although some people think that there is nothing outstanding in this film except the picture, it is quite touching to see the words turn into living pictures.

The overall impression of many people's evaluation is that it is not so much reading as flipping through books in the process of movies, but the original itself combines a lot of scenery and triviality, so it is understandable for movies.

Growing up is painful, but not growing up is another misfortune. People used to live in a shell woven by themselves in the past, and growth is also a process like a cicada shedding its shell.

People throw away all the fears of the past, become no longer willful, lonely, afraid of love and being loved, feel the hearts of others and their own, and make others suffer and themselves suffer no more.