Para Mí, El Que Te Amó
Trama
Como hija de un científico de renombre, Koyomi Hidaka siempre ha estado fascinada por el trabajo de su padre en el centro de investigación. Es allí donde conoce a Shiori Sato, el hijo del colega de su padre, y se forma una conexión instantánea entre los dos adolescentes. A medida que pasan más tiempo juntos, su vínculo se fortalece y comienzan a darse cuenta de que sus sentimientos mutuos van más allá de la mera amistad. Sin embargo, el destino tiene otros planes para ellos. Sus padres, que han estado trabajando juntos en el centro de investigación, comienzan a salir y finalmente se casan. Koyomi y Shiori están devastados por la noticia, ya que significa que se verán obligados a convertirse en hermanastros. Decididos a evitar esta incómoda situación, se les ocurre un plan para huir de sus casas y comenzar una nueva vida juntos. Al emprender su aventura, Koyomi y Shiori enfrentan numerosos desafíos y obstáculos. Deben navegar por las complejidades de estar huyendo, mientras intentan mantener su relación y mantener vivos sus sentimientos mutuos. En el camino, se encuentran con un elenco de personajes que los ayudan de maneras inesperadas, incluido un detective peculiar que se involucra en su búsqueda. A lo largo de todo, Koyomi y Shiori se ven obligados a confrontar sus propias identidades y la verdadera naturaleza de su amor mutuo. Mientras luchan por encontrar una manera de regresar el uno al otro, aprenden valiosas lecciones sobre la confianza, el sacrificio y el poder de la conexión humana. ¿Serán capaces de superar las adversidades y encontrar una manera de estar juntos, o sus sueños de una vida aparte de sus familias resultarán demasiado difíciles de alcanzar?
Reseñas
Mason
What truly moved me was the final line, "It's just a small matter, not worth mentioning at all." Even as time flowed on and the universe shifted, despite losing memories and experiences of each other, their essence remained unchanged. They were still meeting each other, at the best time, as the best version of themselves.
Ariana
Similar to "Hello World," this is a story about a stubbornly persistent male protagonist desperately trying to save the woman he loves. The premise is quite promising, but the development feels too abrupt and, frankly, very childish, like playing house. Are we really expected to believe that a research institution capable of traversing parallel worlds would allow family members and unruly kids to wander into the lab at will? The opening scenario where either the grandfather or the dog could live didn't lead the protagonist to any profound reflection on life, death, or the unidirectional nature of time; apparently, only the female lead's life matters. The second female lead sacrificing her entire life to assist the male lead in his time-travel and virtual space convergence plan to save the female lead is just too tragic a one-sided love story. In the end, the male and female leads are connected through virtual substance...
Raelynn
The temperature of life is the temperature of possibility. Living and dying, the temperature difference between them is the essence of life.
Joseph
Watching both movies together, the theme is exceptionally well-conceived.
Sophie
Dressed in a pseudo-sci-fi cloak, this film strings together two love stories while superficially capitalizing on the trendy parallel universe concept. Meeting her, or not—that's supposed to constitute a parallel world? A barrage of convoluted technical jargon is thrown in, but it serves no real purpose. The story progresses like a "Sims" game, rapidly advancing once the initial settings are input, with years and decades flashing by in a whirlwind. Marketed with the concept that "the order in which you watch them will affect the ending's development," "To Me, the One Who Loved You" and "To Every You I've Loved Before" were released simultaneously on the same day.