Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Photography major - Xingyu Xingyu Film Review

Xingyu Xingyu Film Review

Star Wish received a good response after it was released in mainland China, Hongkong and Taiwan Province. Cecilia Cheung was nominated for the Golden Academy Award and the Golden Bauhinia Award for his outstanding performance in the film. Since then, Taiwan Province singer Richie Jen has firmly occupied a place in the literary world. Senior photographer Ma Chucheng handled the love story of a blind girl in an extremely beautiful and romantic way. Wu, the hero, is a good young man who is blind and deaf, and has become the best object for the little nurse to talk to. But he died suddenly in a car accident, and the angel gave him five days to bring him back to life. But he can't reveal the secret, how can he pour out his love to his sweetheart? The whole film captures touching feelings with a simple structure, and the hero and heroine watch the climax of the meteor shower enough to make people cry.

Moved by the "Star Talk and Star Wish":

I watched "Star Talk and Star Wish" in the summer vacation when I graduated from senior three. It's been six years, and my friends who watched this movie with me have long lost touch. I wonder if everything is all right! But the touch six years ago is still fresh, pure and without any snobbery, which will be unforgettable for a long time!

For Cecilia Cheung, there are not many likes and dislikes and other feelings. Although there are still some melodramatic places in Xingyu Xingyu, the story itself contains these shortcomings. At the moment when she looked for onions in tears, I could feel that my feelings for her had changed! In fact, the stories deduced in Xing Yan and Xing Wish are impossible in reality-the deceased can't return to the world to make up for some regrets before his death. But there are some life philosophies in story skills-once things are lost, they can never come back!

"Nothing is regretted until it is lost", "What is lost is always the most precious" and "Cherish what you have in front of you" ... We are all familiar with a series of sentences and even talk about them when evaluating other people's stories. But in reality, for ourselves, what we are most likely to ignore is often worth cherishing. Regret and tears can make up for nothing, but a farewell ceremony for the dead. ...

This film is a mixture of Ghost (1990) and Love at First Sight (1999), plus the styles of Hong Kong and Japanese dramas. The film advocates a brand-new love concept of "cherish everything in front of you" and "cherish every moment with the right person, don't bury love in your heart". The plot is tortuous and unconvincing. This movie has a good box office, especially when Richie Jen and Cecilia Cheung play the leading roles for the first time, but their performances are excellent, unpretentious, frank, natural and pleasant, and their emotional drama is also interactive. The commentary placed high hopes on Cecilia Cheung, which was later realized. Deng Cuiwen, who plays the pregnant sister, is lively and interesting.